Comment Re:Microsoft Natural for me (Score 1) 74
I recommend this one, too. I just wrote a longing comment why I like it and what the drawbacks are compared to the MS 4000.
I recommend this one, too. I just wrote a longing comment why I like it and what the drawbacks are compared to the MS 4000.
I was a big fan of the 4000 and even stocked up on used replacements.
I also still have a shrink wrapped original MS Natural keyboard in storage.
Last year I switched to the mechanical Perixx Periboard 835 / 535 and am not
looking back:
https://de.perixx.com/collecti...
It has one major "flaw" - the position of the F6 key is on the left compared to the 4000's right,
which took a while to get used to. (Good luck trying to find an exact replacement for the 4000)
The other flaw is that in the backlit one, the F-Key numbers
are not lit. Which is extra annoying with the F6 key move.
Otherwise it's a great improvement and it typing feels much better than the 4000.
There's a cabled 535 version and - what's important for long time use - when you turn off the
wireless mode (there's a switch on the back that turns it off) - the keyboard turns into a cabled
one and still works. There's screws at the back that will allow you to try fix battery issues as well.
I replaced my 4000's at 4 locations - and bought one for the work office with my own money,
so I have the same layout everywhere. I also have an extra one in storage just in case...
There was this highly visible project of the Bavarian capital Munich that moved and moved back after MS moved their headquarters there and because the way they tackled the project.
I live in the state that's affected and think it's about time we take things into our own hands, even if it means a lot of extra work and extra costs.
I met the state government people responsible multiple time (because they have been consistently showing up at IT related meetup events - even the head of state attended a few years ago). They have planned the move for years and made sure that the IT services the government uses are multi-platform (which enables switching later). If you look closely, they are also pushing for Open Data in general and are leading the way in Germany.
To understand why this is happening: While saving money is a nice side effect, the driving force behind this is not savings, but gaining independence and switching to services inside of the EU. Originally the aim was to free ourselves from Microsoft Windows/Office, but the current US administration shows that depending on US cloud providers is not acceptable for public services long term. And then there's the fact that Windows 10 expires in October and current, good-enough-for-office-work would need expensive replacements, this is a perfect moment in history to make the switch stick.
Oh, and the current ruling party is conservative and has first kept a coalition with greens/liberals running smoothly and switched to a greens-only coalition because they gained enough votes in the last election to not need a third party. The local government is ruling pretty conflict free. If you watch them giving interviews, you rarely cringe. They are doing a good job and it's highly unlikely that that they get voted out soon. (It helps that this state is the one where the extreme right wing party is the weakest)
Personally I'm excited to follow what distribution/software they'll use. Because for small businesses it will be an easier decision to skip their own research and just assume that what they chose, will be good enough.
...something similar? I believe they had too many compatibility issues such that they abandoned it, or at least scaled down to niche use. Some suggest MS sabotaged it by spreading F.U.D.
There was this highly visible project in Munich which failed. Not only wasn't it well run and they quickly found out what services couldn't be moved to Linux easily.
MS also bribed themselves back in by moving their headquarters there.
The new projects learned from these mistakes. currently the whole German county Schleswig-Holstein is migrating and they've learned from those mistakes. By first making sure that the software needed is multi platform and - once that's done - beginning to move desktops. Not drop users into Linux when they can't work with it. Also, this time the conservative party is the one pushing for Linux, so there will not be a quick change of mind once the next government is coming. (because the left is not likely to rule there soon)
how many times have municipalities etc tried switching to openoffice/linux/gnu/foss only to backtrack in 5 years? its pribably more expensive just from lost productivity of staff nit being familiar with the apps; because people dont learn how to figure things out anymore they are taught this exact step by step process they are poor at adapting to changes in software
This one is not about the loss of productivity, but the threat of the current US government. If the US is going to war with Denmark over Greenland, running the country on Microsoft will be a huge issue. Just the perceived threat of that happening is motivating a lot.
It helps, that the end of life of Windows 10 forces action - and probably not the one that Microsoft envisioned when they set the end of life deadlines.
And there's another thing that helps: ChatGPT and friends make switching to Linux a lot easier - because you can ask it how things are done and - for simple tasks - that's extremely helpful.
So year, previous attempts have often failed, but now there's a real chance it will stick.
My mother calls her IPad "the computer" now and does everything on it (and has not touched the Windows PC for five years,
which she used a lot before the IPad came along)
It seems that normal people do not have much use for "a computer" any more when all their
basic needs are met by these devices.
The only time I use two windows on an IPad...
On the IPad Mini it would be great if there was a way to turn off accidentally opening extra windows -
this change will just make it even harder to use... not something I look forward to.
It means you get a 1 in 20 chance of 100$ or a guaranteed 5$ gift card.
If it takes you 3 minutes to redeem the 5$ gift card and you earn $100/hour before taxes,
the gift card is worthless. No wonder that quite a lot of people prefer taking
a chance on winning.
This is silly.
James Bond fans may remember the film Goldfinger, where the evil vallian Auric Goldfinger (played by Gert Fröbe) was completely redubbed because of the accent. Or films like My Fair Lady where the singing parts have been partially re-sung.
Incorrectly spoken foreign languages have always only worked for monolingual viewers. With a worldwide audience, for everyone who spoke the language these blunders broke the illusion. Everything in movies is false, so why shouldn't AI help here?
It's exactly not the power of their marketing, but the grass root recommendation that goes around that you need to buy Brother when you're disgusted by HP.
Now that there's a public outcry they have a unique chance to commit to never locking out third party again. If they fail to do it, they lose what made them special.
Which in the long run may hurt them, as the fight against enshittification gains traction and visibility.
50% of Windows computers are running Windows 10: Which Microsoft is forcing people to 'upgrade' at the end of this year. How can Microsoft demand the latest CPU in a machine and allow a 2 year-old machines, to "upgrade"? This seems like an arbitrary demand for more-expensive parts in new equipment. And possibly, a plan for more control of someone's data.
Actually, not allowing the majority of Win10 systems to transition to Windows 11 without major expense may be a good
thing in the end to finally get those frugal older people off Windows. Because having to throw away perfectly usable work computer
at such a large scale is unacceptable. MS telemetry was always feeling icky - but with the new, no-longer-leader-of-the-free-world
US administration in place, running your life and business off a Windows 11 PC may soon become a pill too hard to swallow.
The somewhat reasonable rule there would be "Round to 5cents."
Which retailers obviously will round up to, not down, increasing the price of every item by 2.49999 cents on average.
Just more government nonsense that ends up making stuff more expensive, in other words: a tax.
Since only the total of a sale is rounded, it doesn't increase all prices and penny pinchern can game the system, if they like.
This works fine in those European countries that have dropped the Euro-cent coin years ago..
Why would you listen to AM, when you could listen to FM or DAB?
The local FM stations are not very good. DAB offers more choice and there are some decent stations, but I quickly got tired of having to recharge the radio after listening for a few hours and I'd rather have FM hiss and AM distortions then the constant drop outs when DAB reception is weak.
Add to this
4) continue to support real sim cards next to esim
5) bring back the mini format.
Personally, I switched from Android to Iphone with the 12 Mini, because there was finally a small, great device that's dual sim (even if it's only one sim card)
And I'm a big fan of the iPad Mini, too. But I'm still missing the headphone connector and have not updated the iPad Mini because it doesn't have a sim slot, either.
Looks like it's time to have another look at the Android world to see if there's now a small, high quality phone.
Then the numbers in Finland should go down, because in the last decade, the Scandinavian countries switched to dubbing for children's programming - influenced by commercial broadcasters.
Luckily there's still subtitling for adult oriented programming, so adult viewers will still have their reading skills improved by television.
There are no games on this system.