• blog via finger

    From Daniel@me@sc1f1dan.com to alt.folklore.computers on Mon Jun 8 18:00:22 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    I am considering a relaunch of my old gopher hole and dusting off the
    old phlog.

    After some thought, it seems like a cool idea to mirror that content on
    my finger service.

    If a gopher blog is a phlog, what would a finger blog be? A flog? Too
    similar I think.

    Opinions?

    --
    Daniel
    sysop | air & wave bbs
    finger | info@bbs.airandwave.net
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel Cerqueira@dan.list@lispclub.com to alt.folklore.computers on Tue Jun 9 09:50:37 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    --=-=-=
    Content-Type: text/plain
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

    Daniel <me@sc1f1dan.com> writes:


    I am considering a relaunch of my old gopher hole and dusting off the
    old phlog.

    After some thought, it seems like a cool idea to mirror that content on
    my finger service.

    [...]

    Opinions?

    I never heard a thing silliest. Cheers for Freedom,

    =2D-=20
    A little Consideration, a little Thought for Others, makes
    all the difference. ~ Alan Alexander Milne

    --=-=-=
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  • From gmc@gmc@metro.cx (Koen Martens) to alt.folklore.computers on Tue Jun 9 09:31:04 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Daniel <me@sc1f1dan.com> wrote:
    After some thought, it seems like a cool idea to mirror that content on
    my finger service.

    If a gopher blog is a phlog, what would a finger blog be? A flog? Too
    similar I think.

    Reminds me a bit of Thimbl:

    https://web.archive.org/web/20110203044006/http://www.thimbl.net/

    Cheers,

    Koen
    --
    Software architecture & engineering: https://www.sonologic.se/
    Sci-fi: https://www.koenmartens.nl/
    Retrocomputing videos: https://retroscandinavian.eu/

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Kurt Weiske@kurt.weiske@realitycheckbbs.org.remove-5g5-this to Daniel on Tue Jun 9 07:32:02 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    To: Daniel
    Daniel wrote to alt.folklore.computers <=-

    I am considering a relaunch of my old gopher hole and dusting off the
    old phlog.

    Bring it on - I'm enjoying seeing new Gopher content.

    After some thought, it seems like a cool idea to mirror that content on
    my finger service.

    If a gopher blog is a phlog, what would a finger blog be? A flog? Too similar I think.

    I have my old .plan file saved, and Synchronet BBS does support the
    finger protocol - but I don't know where you'd enter a .plan file?

    kurt weiske | kweiske at realitycheckbbs dot org
    | http://realitycheckbbs.org
    | 1:218/700@fidonet







    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Win32 NewsLink 1.2
    * realitycheckBBS - Aptos, CA - telnet://realitycheckbbs.org
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel@me@sc1f1dan.com to alt.folklore.computers on Tue Jun 9 12:02:39 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    "Kurt Weiske" <kurt.weiske@realitycheckbbs.org.remove-5g5-this> writes:

    To: Daniel
    Daniel wrote to alt.folklore.computers <=-

    I am considering a relaunch of my old gopher hole and dusting off the
    old phlog.

    Bring it on - I'm enjoying seeing new Gopher content.

    After some thought, it seems like a cool idea to mirror that content on my finger service.

    If a gopher blog is a phlog, what would a finger blog be? A flog? Too similar I think.

    I have my old .plan file saved, and Synchronet BBS does support the
    finger protocol - but I don't know where you'd enter a .plan file?

    kurt weiske | kweiske at realitycheckbbs dot org
    | http://realitycheckbbs.org
    | 1:218/700@fidonet

    I don't have a synchronet board so that's a good question. Meatlotion
    folded in his finger server with his mystic board but I'm sure he's
    using some bash scripts to do it.

    My finger service is custom and there are no plan files. Feel free to
    peruse. I spent many hours setting it up and even more hours thinking
    about how I"d do it. It's been a blast.

    Have you ever thought that you could look up wikipedia articles on a
    finger? Or get local movie theater times? Or, even, lookup scientific
    papers? Enjoy.

    --
    Daniel
    sysop | air & wave bbs
    finger | info@bbs.airandwave.net
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Kurt Weiske@kurt.weiske@realitycheckbbs.org.remove-vti-this to Daniel on Wed Jun 10 06:58:11 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    To: Daniel
    Daniel wrote to alt.folklore.computers <=-

    My finger service is custom and there are no plan files. Feel free to peruse. I spent many hours setting it up and even more hours thinking about how I"d do it. It's been a blast.

    Have you ever thought that you could look up wikipedia articles on a finger? Or get local movie theater times? Or, even, lookup scientific papers? Enjoy.

    I love self-contained, lo-tech systems. I started using a 2-way pager
    for outage notification and had a lot of fun finding data that you
    could scrape and send via email, either on-demand or in cron. With a
    little twiddling, I was able to get my Outlook notes and address book
    on it as well.

    Being able to get random text via finger would have been interesting --
    Now, I think we should encourage people to post to finger!

    kurt weiske | kweiske at realitycheckbbs dot org
    | http://realitycheckbbs.org
    | 1:218/700@fidonet
    --- Synchronet 3.21f-Win32 NewsLink 1.2
    * realitycheckBBS - Aptos, CA - telnet://realitycheckbbs.org
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Daniel@me@sc1f1dan.com to alt.folklore.computers on Wed Jun 10 11:35:30 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    "Kurt Weiske" <kurt.weiske@realitycheckbbs.org.remove-vti-this> writes:

    To: Daniel
    Daniel wrote to alt.folklore.computers <=-

    My finger service is custom and there are no plan files. Feel free to peruse. I spent many hours setting it up and even more hours thinking about how I"d do it. It's been a blast.

    Have you ever thought that you could look up wikipedia articles on a finger? Or get local movie theater times? Or, even, lookup scientific papers? Enjoy.

    I love self-contained, lo-tech systems. I started using a 2-way pager
    for outage notification and had a lot of fun finding data that you
    could scrape and send via email, either on-demand or in cron. With a
    little twiddling, I was able to get my Outlook notes and address book
    on it as well.

    Being able to get random text via finger would have been interesting --
    Now, I think we should encourage people to post to finger!

    I'm trying to achieve a level of digital minimalism in my household. My
    ideal setup would be to operate 90% of my daily tasks on an old timey
    terminal.

    I spent some time investigating whether I ought to restore an old Tandy terminal or a model 4, but, thought I'd rather use something modern like
    a RC2014 rig but running CP/M for its low power consumption. I recently
    read a term on another NG discussing permacomputing, and that sent me
    down a rabbit hole.

    I don't want to chase nasty tech issues on aging hardware. On top of
    that, 80s retro hardware didn't have keyboard standards yet, so the key
    configs are something I'd rather not form bad habits from.

    I hope you enjoy using my finger service. I don't expect more than a
    dozen hits a day, a bit too esoteric for most.

    --
    Daniel
    sysop | air & wave bbs
    finger | info@bbs.airandwave.net
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?=@ldo@nz.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Wed Jun 10 23:51:18 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Wed, 10 Jun 2026 11:35:30 -0700, Daniel wrote:

    I spent some time investigating whether I ought to restore an old
    Tandy terminal or a model 4, but, thought I'd rather use something
    modern like a RC2014 rig but running CP/M for its low power
    consumption.

    The Raspberry Pi seems to be the most popular solution for this sort
    of application: powerful enough to emulate any of those old machines
    and their OSes, yet consuming much less power than any of them, and of
    course better supported with more up-to-date tools and documentation.
    And user/developer community!
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Charlie Gibbs@cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Thu Jun 11 19:02:36 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.
    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | No artificial
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | intelligence was
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | used in the creation
    / \ if you read it the right way. | of this post.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?=@ldo@nz.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 00:10:04 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Thu, 11 Jun 2026 11:09:51 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:

    Lawrence DrCOOliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:

    On Wed, 10 Jun 2026 11:35:30 -0700, Daniel wrote:

    I spent some time investigating whether I ought to restore an old
    Tandy terminal or a model 4, but, thought I'd rather use something
    modern like a RC2014 rig but running CP/M for its low power
    consumption.

    The Raspberry Pi seems to be the most popular solution for this
    sort of application: powerful enough to emulate any of those old
    machines and their OSes, yet consuming much less power than any of
    them, and of course better supported with more up-to-date tools and
    documentation. And user/developer community!

    A Raspberry PI is just a modern linux system, and comes with all the annoyances of modern software that is abstractions on top of
    abstractions on top of abstractions on top of ... to the point that
    no-one knows what's going on anymore and stuff breaks all the time.

    ItrCOs not a Windows system -- itrCOs not a black box, so donrCOt treat it
    like one. Linux has inbuilt tools so you can diagnose problems and fix
    them -- there is no big sticker across the cover saying rCLNO
    USER-SERVICEABLE PARTS INSIDErCY. ItrCOs designed for tinkering. If yourCOre
    a retrocomputing enthusiast, yourCOre probably already a hardware
    tinkerer, but perhaps yourCOre not accustomed to thinking of software
    the same way?

    Running a Linux system like a Raspberry Pi is much less work (and less
    money spent) than trying to keep old authentic hardware running.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From gmc@gmc@metro.cx (Koen Martens) to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 15:20:45 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Lawrence DrCOOliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:
    On Thu, 11 Jun 2026 11:09:51 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:
    A Raspberry PI is just a modern linux system, and comes with all the
    annoyances of modern software that is abstractions on top of
    abstractions on top of abstractions on top of ... to the point that
    no-one knows what's going on anymore and stuff breaks all the time.

    ItrCOs not a Windows system -- itrCOs not a black box, so donrCOt treat it like one. Linux has inbuilt tools so you can diagnose problems and fix
    them -- there is no big sticker across the cover saying rCLNO USER-SERVICEABLE PARTS INSIDErCY. ItrCOs designed for tinkering. If yourCOre a retrocomputing enthusiast, yourCOre probably already a hardware
    tinkerer, but perhaps yourCOre not accustomed to thinking of software
    the same way?

    I've been using Linux since the nineties, never used MS Windows
    otherwise than at gunpoint for customers that refused to let me use
    a Linux or BSD machine. My servers, at home and in the datacenter,
    are mostly FreeBSD with some Linux VMs here and there. Throw in
    some IlluminOS, NetBSD and OpenBSD for fun as well. Yes, I'm
    pretty much a 'software tinkerer', thank you.

    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly documented
    daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck. With competing
    audio standards that all fight for access to the underlying ALSA sound
    device, sometimes emulating each other, sometimes not. Wayland that
    makes screen capture involve at least 3 daemons, of which many variants
    exist and you need the exact right combination for it to work, and
    that makes your screen flicker constantly. And if you file a bug report, everyone's pointing to the other project.

    And I haven't even started to talk about the different bloated desktop management systems and their associated GUI libraries and plethora
    of daemons that need to be running to start the most basic of graphical applications (and yes, you'll need all of them running for all of the
    variants if you use a decent selection of applications). Oh, and they
    all have their own equivalent of what is known as 'the registry' in
    windows, and to change something silly like a font or DPI scaling,
    you need to make sure all those registries agree.

    I still use Linux on the desktop (various distros on different
    machines). It's just the least bad of the lot, but only marginally.

    Running a Linux system like a Raspberry Pi is much less work (and less
    money spent) than trying to keep old authentic hardware running.

    I prefer the simplicity of CP/M on the RC2014 over the pain of
    managing a modern Linux install on a Raspberry PI. Also, RC2014 is not
    old authentic hardware, it's brand new. But even old authentic hardware
    takes a lot less effort to keep running than modern Linux. And I have
    ample experience of both.

    Cheers,

    Koen
    --
    Software architecture & engineering: https://www.sonologic.se/
    Sci-fi: https://www.koenmartens.nl/
    Retrocomputing videos: https://retroscandinavian.eu/

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jonathan Lamothe@jonathan@jlamothe.net to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 13:44:19 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.

    It's not just the bloat on the machine itself, it's the bloat on the
    site as well. The modern web is a dumpster fire.
    --
    Regards,
    Jonathan Lamothe
    https://jlamothe.net - PGP: 9CF2CE03EBF08E8C8B66C3660198463E3CF3FFD1
    I N++ Unicode
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Charlie Gibbs@cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 18:52:10 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-12, Jonathan Lamothe <jonathan@jlamothe.net> wrote:

    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.

    It's not just the bloat on the machine itself, it's the bloat on the
    site as well. The modern web is a dumpster fire.

    Agreed. Web sites could be lightning-fast if they weren't downloading
    all sorts of additional cruft. "But don't you want to have a rich
    User Experience (UX)?" the devotees will ask me. My reply: "NO!"
    --
    /~\ Charlie Gibbs | No artificial
    \ / <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> | intelligence was
    X I'm really at ac.dekanfrus | used in the creation
    / \ if you read it the right way. | of this post.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From drb@drb@ihatespam.msu.edu (Dennis Boone) to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 19:54:00 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Agreed. Web sites could be lightning-fast if they weren't downloading
    all sorts of additional cruft. "But don't you want to have a rich
    User Experience (UX)?" the devotees will ask me. My reply: "NO!"

    "No. I don't want _ANYTHING_ you're pleased to call 'an experience'." :)

    De
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?=@ldo@nz.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Fri Jun 12 23:50:59 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Fri, 12 Jun 2026 15:20:45 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:

    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly
    documented daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck.

    What daemon would would that be?

    With competing audio standards that all fight for access to the
    underlying ALSA sound device, sometimes emulating each other,
    sometimes not.

    The Linux desktop world standardized on PulseAudio years ago. That is
    now being superseded by PipeWire, which includes all the Audio and
    MIDI support of PulseAudio and extends the patchbay-style architecture
    to video as well.

    Wayland that makes screen capture involve at least 3 daemons, of
    which many variants exist and you need the exact right combination
    for it to work ...

    I mainly do screen snapshots, which work easily enough. If a single
    frame is easy, why should a sequence of frames be any harder?

    And I haven't even started to talk about the different bloated
    desktop management systems and their associated GUI libraries and
    plethora of daemons that need to be running to start the most basic
    of graphical applications (and yes, you'll need all of them running
    for all of the variants if you use a decent selection of
    applications).

    Not really. You run one choice of GUI desktop. Any apps that use
    different GUI toolkits will simply load them on demand. ThatrCOs how
    itrCOs always worked.

    Oh, and they all have their own equivalent of what is known as 'the
    registry' in windows, and to change something silly like a font or
    DPI scaling, you need to make sure all those registries agree.

    *NONE* of them have the equivalent of rCL'the registry' in windowsrCY.
    There is no corruption-prone systemwide binary database, that requires
    reboots after making changes, and that accumulates cruft that makes
    your system run slower and slower and less and less reliably.

    I still use Linux on the desktop (various distros on different
    machines). It's just the least bad of the lot, but only marginally.

    There are over 300 different Linux distros. Some of them are even
    designed to cater to 1990s throwbacks.

    Running a Linux system like a Raspberry Pi is much less work (and less
    money spent) than trying to keep old authentic hardware running.

    I prefer the simplicity of CP/M on the RC2014 over the pain of
    managing a modern Linux install on a Raspberry PI. Also, RC2014 is
    not old authentic hardware, it's brand new. But even old authentic
    hardware takes a lot less effort to keep running than modern Linux.
    And I have ample experience of both.

    Maybe you havenrCOt used that much rCLold authentic hardwarerCY lately ... ? --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From mechanicjay@mechanicjay@sol.smbfc.net (Mechanicjay) to alt.folklore.computers on Sat Jun 13 01:09:59 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Fri, 12 Jun 2026 15:20:45 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote: >Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly documented
    daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck. With competing

    And I haven't even started to talk about the different bloated desktop >management systems and their associated GUI libraries and plethora
    of daemons that need to be running to start the most basic of graphical >applications (and yes, you'll need all of them running for all of the

    Gentoo with Openrc, X11, and the i3 window manager has made my computing life much simpler and responsive.

    --
    Sent from my Personal DECstation 5000/25
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From gmc@gmc@metro.cx (Koen Martens) to alt.folklore.computers on Sat Jun 13 06:34:56 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Jonathan Lamothe <jonathan@jlamothe.net> wrote:
    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.

    It's not just the bloat on the machine itself, it's the bloat on the
    site as well. The modern web is a dumpster fire.

    Absolutely. Up until recently all we had at my house was a crappy
    4G uplink. The web was completely unusable with that. We now have
    fiber, so I don't notice it too much anymore, except when the
    laptop fan goes crazy on some particularly badly put together
    site.

    Thankfully, gopher is still around & active.

    Cheers,

    Koen
    --
    Software architecture & engineering: https://www.sonologic.se/
    Sci-fi: https://www.koenmartens.nl/
    Retrocomputing videos: https://retroscandinavian.eu/

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to alt.folklore.computers on Sat Jun 13 14:46:52 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?= <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
    On Fri, 12 Jun 2026 15:20:45 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:

    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly
    documented daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck.

    What daemon would would that be?

    Try not to be an idiot. You know quite well which
    daemon is being referred to, as you defend it frequently.

    That particular daemon violates most of the philosophy
    of unix.
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Nuno Silva@nunojsilva@invalid.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 15:30:51 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-11, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).
    --^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    The way JS frameworks require newer browsers and sites in general are
    full of automation and CSS features that far outweight any performance improvements in e.g. Firefox architecture redesigns does come across as something quite convenient to push against not-recent-enough hardware.

    Perhaps even more than entities insisting you have Windows and/or can
    deal with CDF or Office Open XML.

    Even if it's non-intentional, it's far too often the case that something lighter, and not forcing specific browsers, would also work on more
    browsers and machines

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.
    --
    Nuno Silva
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Nuno Silva@nunojsilva@invalid.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 15:36:24 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-12, Charlie Gibbs wrote:

    On 2026-06-12, Jonathan Lamothe <jonathan@jlamothe.net> wrote:

    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.

    It's not just the bloat on the machine itself, it's the bloat on the
    site as well. The modern web is a dumpster fire.

    Agreed. Web sites could be lightning-fast if they weren't downloading
    all sorts of additional cruft. "But don't you want to have a rich
    User Experience (UX)?" the devotees will ask me. My reply: "NO!"

    Remember the site which was serving hundreds of megabytes to users and
    at the same time were somehow looking for compassion because sharing
    links to their site on Mastodon was somehow hammering their servers?
    (IIRC they had misconfigured caching too)

    <https://tech.slashdot.org/story/24/05/05/0241211/is-mastodons-link-previewing-overloading-servers>
    --
    Nuno Silva
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Nuno Silva@nunojsilva@invalid.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 15:39:25 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-13, Koen Martens wrote:

    Jonathan Lamothe <jonathan@jlamothe.net> wrote:
    Charlie Gibbs <cgibbs@kltpzyxm.invalid> writes:

    On 2026-06-11, Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:

    It's always something, we're at the point where the house of
    cards that is modern software is collapsing. Add in slop from
    LLMs, and you have the bankrupcy of computing. It's over.

    Clear analysis of any situation is often mistaken for pessimism.
    -- Barbara Hambly: The Walls of Air

    My wife's Macbook is running more and more slowly and web sites
    are hanging. The word from the local Genius Bar is that she
    needs a new machine. Not because there's anything wrong with
    it, but the current generation of bloatware is bogging it down
    (sometimes, I suspect, deliberately).

    Oh well, it's a licence to print money, if you can stomach it.

    It's not just the bloat on the machine itself, it's the bloat on the
    site as well. The modern web is a dumpster fire.

    Absolutely. Up until recently all we had at my house was a crappy
    4G uplink. The web was completely unusable with that. We now have
    fiber, so I don't notice it too much anymore, except when the
    laptop fan goes crazy on some particularly badly put together
    site.

    Thankfully, gopher is still around & active.

    Cheers,

    Koen

    This is all FUBAR. On GSM I've for some times in my life - even
    including recently, thanks to the 3G shutdowns - had the pleasure to use
    mobile data over 2G. It kind of tells when a site is just too bloated,
    even if the networking could perform better, well designed pages will
    load quite faster.

    Some of this can have great applications, but some of it sometimes does
    look like somebody invented a problem to have to invent a solution.
    --
    Nuno Silva
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Nuno Silva@nunojsilva@invalid.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 15:49:55 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-12, Koen Martens wrote:

    Lawrence DrCOOliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> wrote:
    On Thu, 11 Jun 2026 11:09:51 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:
    A Raspberry PI is just a modern linux system, and comes with all the
    annoyances of modern software that is abstractions on top of
    abstractions on top of abstractions on top of ... to the point that
    no-one knows what's going on anymore and stuff breaks all the time.

    ItrCOs not a Windows system -- itrCOs not a black box, so donrCOt treat it >> like one. Linux has inbuilt tools so you can diagnose problems and fix
    them -- there is no big sticker across the cover saying rCLNO
    USER-SERVICEABLE PARTS INSIDErCY. ItrCOs designed for tinkering. If yourCOre >> a retrocomputing enthusiast, yourCOre probably already a hardware
    tinkerer, but perhaps yourCOre not accustomed to thinking of software
    the same way?

    I've been using Linux since the nineties, never used MS Windows
    otherwise than at gunpoint for customers that refused to let me use
    a Linux or BSD machine. My servers, at home and in the datacenter,
    are mostly FreeBSD with some Linux VMs here and there. Throw in
    some IlluminOS, NetBSD and OpenBSD for fun as well. Yes, I'm
    pretty much a 'software tinkerer', thank you.

    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly documented
    daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck. With competing
    audio standards that all fight for access to the underlying ALSA sound device, sometimes emulating each other, sometimes not. Wayland that
    makes screen capture involve at least 3 daemons, of which many variants
    exist and you need the exact right combination for it to work, and
    that makes your screen flicker constantly. And if you file a bug report, everyone's pointing to the other project.

    Does make for somewhat funny moments as some people will do things like insisting you can't stay with ALSA because it "does not support"
    concurrent applications.

    As for bug reports, this does touch a quite big issue, the amount of
    projects that nowadays require using such bloated sites, with limited,
    if any, browser compatibility. And that's besides sites being
    Cloudflared. At least stuff like Anubis is better designed, besides
    working on more browsers these days, it also has a default setting that
    enables users to access the sites if there is a problem passing the
    challenge. Unlike Cloudflare which actively changed their offering so
    that it'd not support more than a few browsers. And that's besides their ability to screw-up, like when they required Origin: in every request
    other than the first and turned their Browser Integrity Challenge in a self-DDoS, as their services kept redirecting non-Origin: browsers to
    square one...

    And I haven't even started to talk about the different bloated desktop management systems and their associated GUI libraries and plethora
    of daemons that need to be running to start the most basic of graphical applications (and yes, you'll need all of them running for all of the variants if you use a decent selection of applications). Oh, and they
    all have their own equivalent of what is known as 'the registry' in
    windows, and to change something silly like a font or DPI scaling,
    you need to make sure all those registries agree.

    I keep finding this funny given that two decades ago I've found changing resolution (and thus scaling the UI) to be something supported under
    X11, but I've been meaning to do further tests to see what did I forget
    and what does happen nowadays. And I'm still not happy with how some X11 drivers seem to override the EDID-provided information by forcing a
    hardcoded resolution (96?), instead of retaining the one computed from
    EDID, but I might be missing something here...

    I still use Linux on the desktop (various distros on different
    machines). It's just the least bad of the lot, but only marginally.

    Running a Linux system like a Raspberry Pi is much less work (and less
    money spent) than trying to keep old authentic hardware running.

    I prefer the simplicity of CP/M on the RC2014 over the pain of
    managing a modern Linux install on a Raspberry PI. Also, RC2014 is not
    old authentic hardware, it's brand new. But even old authentic hardware
    takes a lot less effort to keep running than modern Linux. And I have
    ample experience of both.

    Cheers,

    Koen
    --
    Nuno Silva
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Nuno Silva@nunojsilva@invalid.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 15:52:09 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On 2026-06-13, Mechanicjay wrote:

    On Fri, 12 Jun 2026 15:20:45 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens <gmc@metro.cx> wrote:
    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly documented >>daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck. With competing

    And I haven't even started to talk about the different bloated desktop >>management systems and their associated GUI libraries and plethora
    of daemons that need to be running to start the most basic of graphical >>applications (and yes, you'll need all of them running for all of the

    Gentoo with Openrc, X11, and the i3 window manager has made my computing life much simpler and responsive.

    Heh. That combination might be why I still use GNU/Linux.
    --
    Nuno Silva
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From gmc@gmc@metro.cx (Koen Martens) to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 16:21:15 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    Nuno Silva <nunojsilva@invalid.invalid> wrote:
    As for bug reports, this does touch a quite big issue, the amount of
    projects that nowadays require using such bloated sites, with limited,
    if any, browser compatibility. And that's besides sites being
    Cloudflared. At least stuff like Anubis is better designed, besides
    working on more browsers these days, it also has a default setting that enables users to access the sites if there is a problem passing the challenge. Unlike Cloudflare which actively changed their offering so
    that it'd not support more than a few browsers. And that's besides their ability to screw-up, like when they required Origin: in every request
    other than the first and turned their Browser Integrity Challenge in a self-DDoS, as their services kept redirecting non-Origin: browsers to
    square one...

    Not to mention that among cloudflare's customers are the same people
    who will sell you ddos-as-a-service, the very thing they claim to
    protect you from.

    Cheers,

    Koen
    --
    Software architecture & engineering: https://www.sonologic.se/
    Sci-fi: https://www.koenmartens.nl/
    Retrocomputing videos: https://retroscandinavian.eu/

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jonathan Lamothe@jonathan@jlamothe.net to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 13:27:48 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) writes:

    Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?= <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
    On Fri, 12 Jun 2026 15:20:45 -0000 (UTC), Koen Martens wrote:

    Linux is as bad as windows these days. With one big poorly
    documented daemon that does everything and is opaque as heck.

    What daemon would would that be?

    Try not to be an idiot. You know quite well which
    daemon is being referred to, as you defend it frequently.

    That particular daemon violates most of the philosophy
    of unix.

    To be fair, saying that $thing "violates the philosophy of unix" feels
    like more of a religious argument than an actual technical one. I think
    that the UNIX philosopy (of having multiple small, tools that each do
    one thing well and can be piped together into more complex workflows) is
    very powerful and valid, but it's not the One True Way(TM).

    That said, if that's a thing that someone is looking for, then yes,
    systemd is a bad choice, but that's a big if.

    I'm personally not a fan of systemd's complexity, but it has--like it or not--become more or less a de-facto standard in the world of Linux. I
    mostly use it because it's already there and I can't be bothered to swap
    it out for something else.

    If I wanted something simple and no-nonsense, I'd probably use a BSD. I
    have toyed with this idea in the past. So far though, pragmatism has
    won out for me.

    Everything is always a trade-off, and different people are going to make different choices based on their own personal needs. Isn't it wonderful
    that they have that option?
    --
    Regards,
    Jonathan Lamothe
    https://jlamothe.net - PGP: 9CF2CE03EBF08E8C8B66C3660198463E3CF3FFD1
    I N++ Unicode
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lawrence =?iso-8859-13?q?D=FFOliveiro?=@ldo@nz.invalid to alt.folklore.computers on Sun Jun 14 23:48:39 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Sun, 14 Jun 2026 13:27:48 -0400, Jonathan Lamothe wrote:

    To be fair, saying that $thing "violates the philosophy of unix"
    feels like more of a religious argument than an actual technical
    one. I think that the UNIX philosopy (of having multiple small,
    tools that each do one thing well and can be piped together into
    more complex workflows) is very powerful and valid, but it's not the
    One True Way(TM).

    ItrCOs a half-truth. The small pieces wouldnrCOt work without the big ones (e.g. kernel, shell, C compiler, X11 server -- thankfully that last
    one is going away).

    I'm personally not a fan of systemd's complexity ...

    Systemd myth number 11: rCLsystemd is complexrCY <https://0pointer.de/blog/projects/the-biggest-myths.html>.

    If yourCOve got a problem with systemd, at least let it be an original
    one ...

    If I wanted something simple and no-nonsense, I'd probably use a
    BSD. I have toyed with this idea in the past. So far though,
    pragmatism has won out for me.

    So, is rCLpragmatismrCY not compatible with rCLsimple and no-nonsenserCY?

    Maybe the BSDs are not so rCLsimple and no-nonsenserCY after all ...
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Kurt Weiske@kurt.weiske@realitycheckbbs.org.remove-25-this to Jonathan Lamothe on Mon Jun 15 07:10:03 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    To: Jonathan Lamothe
    Jonathan Lamothe wrote to alt.folklore.computers <=-

    If I wanted something simple and no-nonsense, I'd probably use a BSD.
    I have toyed with this idea in the past. So far though, pragmatism has won out for me.

    BSD was all fun and games until I left a typo in rc.d and rebooted
    remotely. :(

    I'm of the same mindset. When I run a Linux desktop, I spend way too
    much time twiddling with eye candy, when a BSD running a simple window
    manager like XFCE would minimize the amount of time playing with the
    environment and result in more time working/creating/etc.

    kurt weiske | kweiske at realitycheckbbs dot org
    | http://realitycheckbbs.org
    | 1:218/700@fidonet





    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
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    * realitycheckBBS - Aptos, CA - telnet://realitycheckbbs.org
    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From John Ames@commodorejohn@gmail.com to alt.folklore.computers on Mon Jun 15 08:17:51 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers

    On Sun, 14 Jun 2026 13:27:48 -0400
    Jonathan Lamothe <jonathan@jlamothe.net> wrote:

    If I wanted something simple and no-nonsense, I'd probably use a BSD.
    I have toyed with this idea in the past. So far though, pragmatism
    has won out for me.

    I need to have a go with NetBSD again; I do like the no-nonsense bare-
    bones approach, but I never did figure out what the local alternatives
    to wicd/etc. were the last time I tried getting a daily driver going.

    --- Synchronet 3.22a-Linux NewsLink 1.2