whofearsthenight

joined 1 year ago
[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Now if you had to guess how often I remember that there is a keyboard shortcut that does this, but don't remember what it is, and do remember that I can just press up 30-70 times...

[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Got tired of trying to figure out what service to watch a show on this week. Back to sailing the 7 seas…

[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'll also toss out that if you privacy and non-annoyance are your goals with an out of the box voice assistant, the only real option these days is a HomePod. I built my smart home with combination of Echos throughout the house, and I pretty much regret it now. I wasn't as worried about privacy, but these things are so fucking annoying these days. "Start a timer for 5 minutes." "Okay, do you want to play some bullshit trivia game while you're timer is going?" No, never. Ever. I mean, at least she'll still turn the lights on without spouting back something dumb, but that's just about it. Probably what I'll be doing now is still using the Alexholes as a speaker target with the mute button on all of the time (better spotify integration) and start replacing with siri balls.

[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 11 points 1 year ago

It's fine now when there aren't nearly as many users, but I don't see it scaling long term unless hashtags are a thing or something like that. Even something simple like gaming, over on reddit I'm in several very active subs - pcgaming, playstation, playstation4, several zelda subs, etc. If fediverse alternatives get to even 1/4 of the userbase that reddit has, the gaming (or whatever) portion is going to be such a firehose it won't really be usable. And IIRC this is how it played out on reddit as well. I think (though could be mistaken) reddit started with a fairly small set of subs and it wasn't until later that you could create your own subs.

[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Yes, but reddit is unique in the social media companies in that Twitter (pre-Elon) and facebook at least had to pay a shit ton of money to get people to moderate.

It's basically "no one cares as long as the trains run on time." In the extreme, I would bet that it's single-digits of TikTok users that actually make content. Reddit is probably not even that far from that. This move, let's piss off our unpaid moderators and the users that make all of our content, is going to effect even the normies.

[–] whofearsthenight@kbin.social 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

"it's time to grow up and be an adult company" he says, logging on to the site that's mostly memes, anime, and pictures of people's genitals.