Comment Re:Enshitification never stops. End of gmail for m (Score 1) 91
The "provider" that's already running the rest of your servers can also run fetchmail or Thunderbird. Or you can use any VPS like even the free Oracle ones.
The "provider" that's already running the rest of your servers can also run fetchmail or Thunderbird. Or you can use any VPS like even the free Oracle ones.
Who asked for this form factor?! If you really need to move a computer between workspaces (or work/home) a much more convenient form factor is just a Raspberry Pi (in a case) size (and easily achievable nowadays even in Intel/AMD world). But nobody wants that, everyone wants a laptop, that can be used by itself too without any shenanigans.
This has been tried in many forms, with Samsung's DeX (Microsoft Continuum and some other attempts earlier), Android Desktop now, whatever Apple's equivalent is too - it's a much more compelling proposition to just dock the phone for any "desktop" work, which is certainly possible nowadays (and it's been for a long time), except that nobody does it competently.
I want Clippy back!
A junior sales rep costs $150K a year?
That's the cost to the business, not the salary to the employee.
The cost of payroll + benefits + management overhead + office space + heating/cooling + parking lot + etc, is typically twice what the employee is paid.
An AI doesn't need any of that stuff, doesn't take vacations, or sick days, or weekends, or need sleep.
many people have no idea who has their data.
Why should I care?
What bad thing will happen to me if some random business knows what brand of tea I drink?
STOP assuming every website should function perfectly on a fucking 2” screen.
30 million American adults use their phone as their primary means of accessing the Internet.
Half of those don't even own a computer.
So, yes, websites offering basic services dang well better work on a small screen.
I never really understood rebranding at all. Take what your customers know about your brand, and throw it in the trash.
A Dell customer might think about the brand only when considering a new laptop.
But the marketing department sees the brands a dozen times a day, gets tired of them, and lobbies for a refresh.
Rebranding is almost always a mistake.
It might be about money but related to what's spent with the infrastructure needed to check every few minutes the pop3 accounts people configured even 20 years ago or so, while they login to gmail every once in a while, potentially nearly never (hence their move to delete inactive accounts, but still after years of inactivity, and even so I think they can't bring themselves to do it). Sure, it might not be so huge in Google's great scheme of things but such corporations are great at nickel and diming (while at the same time great at crazily spending for some moonshot).
For sure the vast, VAST majority of such customers just have random free accounts, and from the potential custom domain customers if they do it via POP3 it means they ALREADY have a fully-fledged email system hosted somewhere else (paid or not, self-hosted or not). Now if they already have it it's not much of a deal to get their emails from there to gmail (if there's such a great value to have everything together), via forwarding or just some way to drop it directly in Gmail's inbox via IMAP (yes, you can just upload your emails too via IMAP, and you can do it automatically from another inbox with anything from fetchmail to even full blown Thunderbird).
Alternatively one could use something like Cloudflare's email routing (free, needs domain hosted with Cloudflare) that involves no (other) mailbox but that's not going over POP3 so it won't be influenced by this in any way.
What can that achieve? IMAP isn't supported even now (and never was for this workflow, TFA is misleading).
Retrieving email from other accounts via IMAP was never supported so there's nothing to kill there.
Thank you Daveid.
It's perfectly normal to go around spitting in people's faces, hoping for them taking a punch at you. Longing for it. Very normal. Lots of people live that way.
If you are smart enough to know that you're not smart enough to be an Engineer, then you're in Business.