funkycarrot

joined 2 years ago

Unfortunately the reviews on Trustpilot and posts on Reddit make it painfully obvious that their customer service is basically nonexistent. Combined with the typical random account-closing most fintechs are known for, this is not a reliable option.

Looking at this comparison, iCard might be an option if you desperately need a way to use NFC payments on your phone. Reviews are good, but it appears to be a prepaid system. Lots of fees to get lost in, too.

But old school might be just fine, too. I just realized my card does fit into my phone case!

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 23 points 1 month ago

Love that you have to specify it's a joke because someone here would legitimately try to help otherwise

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 8 points 4 months ago

I too want to domesticate a Firefox

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 8 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Hold up aren't you the person who ditched the U.S. for Britain like a month ago?

Hope you get a job soon, keep on searching! Miracles happen when you least expect them :)

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 5 months ago

Have a later model, the Pocketbook Verse (not the pro edition). Flashed KOReader on it which was much easier than anticipated. Have a couple extra features in the reader that way.

It does as promised. I just plug it into my devices to get epubs onto it. You don't even need a book management software like Calibre, you can use it similarly to how you'd use a thumb drive.

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 5 months ago

Thanks for taking the time to share, this was very helpful :D

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Thank you for the thoughtful reply! One more question: Can you really manage everything using the website? Just sounds too good to be true!

Checked out the support pages. It does get a bit complex trying to figure out if they charge for adding money via bank transfers. But I got to it! For other people wondering (only valid for EU folks):

Turns out they take the customary 1.75% on using the card to get cash from ATMs (and even take 0.50€ on top after the second time). That makes them slightly worse than established banks for this purpose.

However they offer pretty low fees on transactions with the card. While established banks still take 1.75% on every transaction, Wise currently takes 0.46% on exchanges from EUR to JPY. They don't seem to skew the exchange rate like PayPal does either. The only drawback is they're free to change their fee any time, while most normal banks haven't deviated from 1,75% in forever.

To my great relief adding EUR to your Wise balance is free with a standard SEPA (EU zone) bank transfer. And they automatically convert money to other currencies as needed. Though I wonder whether you can convert in advance to make use of favorable exchange rates.

This makes it seem like Wise is a solid option. Only one data breach so far, too ;)

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (4 children)

Planning a trip to Japan soon and would like a credit card to pay for accommodation (I don't have a credit card yet). Wise seems to be what I want but I'm not sure:

  1. Can you top up your Wise balance from your local bank account for free?
  2. Are conversion fees and ATM withdrawal fees abroad reasonable?
  3. Is their human support any good?
  4. How intrusive was the sign up and KYC?
[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 5 months ago

The President of the Signal Foundation (Meredith Whittaker) has commented on this in this podcast episode. Skip to 1:05:45.

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Having uBlock Origin everywhere has spoiled me I guess

[–] funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 5 months ago

People that don't have quark are simply uncultured barbarians.

Sorry.

 

cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/24899909

It's possible to submit questions already. Getting a feeling there'll be some uncomfortable ones; we'll see if they dare to engage with those.

A lot of the frustration that people have stems from Firefox's deeply flawed financing model, whereby the focus can never be solely put on the quality of the browser. Personally, with Google now being recognized as a monopolist and Mozilla in danger of losing 85% of its funding, I hope they can adopt Thunderbird's financing model (i.e. donations).

Now that they're not doing fundraising for lawmaking and/or grassroots activism because their advocacy team shut down, I hope they'll get a few people together and start to raise money from the user base.

This could be a very positive change for Mozilla if they play it right.

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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by funkycarrot@discuss.tchncs.de to c/opensource@lemmy.ml
 

It's possible to submit questions already. Getting a feeling there'll be some uncomfortable ones; we'll see if they dare to engage with those.

A lot of the frustration that people have stems from Firefox's deeply flawed financing model, whereby the focus can never be solely put on the quality of the browser. Personally, with Google now being recognized as a monopolist and Mozilla in danger of losing 85% of its funding, I hope they can adopt Thunderbird's financing model (i.e. donations).

Now that they're not doing fundraising for lawmaking and/or grassroots activism because their advocacy team shut down, I hope they'll get a few people together and start to raise money from the user base.

This could be a very positive change for Mozilla if they play it right.

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