

This is the of the weirder interview series I’ve ever come across, and fittingly I get introduced with the correct guest. Well done. Appreciate the introduction!


This is the of the weirder interview series I’ve ever come across, and fittingly I get introduced with the correct guest. Well done. Appreciate the introduction!


I didn’t check all missing songs (wsy to many), but the ones I did check were actually missing, and it wasn’t just an import or transfer error. I mostly checked those that were important to me and stood out in the import-list marked as missing when quickly scanning across them.
I have probably 100+ playlists. Not having folders is just not feasible. I wish use playlists in non-normal ways, more like notes in some cases, which is harder or impossible without folders. So for me it isn’t an option to use a service that doesn’t have them.


Yes discoverability for new music is also critical for me, but I never even got that far to give it a shot. The majority of the time in listening to music is to discover new-to-me artists/songs. I had heard mixed reviews on that, some incredibly happy with it some saying it’s just horrible, but the other issues are already showstoppers…


I recently tried to switch from Spotify to Qobuz, had to give up basically immediately. Two reasons:
Surprisingly, 1) was a bigger deal breaker than 2). I need to find the time to check the other alternatives.
I think it’s about printers being required by law to (covertly) watermark copies as such, and make it somewhat traceable. This is supposedly to prevent duplication of protected works (books?) but also to prevent someone just using it to print money (badly, probably).
To my knowledge all major brands incorporate something like this.


The one point that has basically been solved is NAT traversal. Thanks to Wire guard, Tailscale and the like. The relevant parts are open source and can be used basically as a library.


I don’t know how recent your experience is with installing Linux, but there are no “hacks” required, haven’t been for many years. In 99.5% of cases everything just works, including sleep & suspend. This is just incredibly outdated or just plain bad advice. There is no tech-savvy-ness needed to use it either.
I’ve installed it for as tech illiterate people as you can imagine and told them “just use it like you have before”. They had a few questions where the answer would usually be “well what did you do before”, told em to try and that was that. I personally found the PCs to feel faster, but that’s my own comment, not theirs. I don’t think they noticed.
No, cause it’s at work and not my choice. It’s also just one example of many. I don’t run Windows on any of my own PCs any more.
You can’t even install Windows (local account) these days without answering 3 of these. If you ever click on one of the recovery options, you’ll be asked for one of them.
My solution is usually to just randomly smash the keyboard for a while.


So far I’m happy with my Fairphone 5. Not exactly cheap, but I’d argue it is value for money in the end. Timely security updates, unlockable bootloader (though I haven’t yet) and updates for (at least) 7 years after launch. I haven’t had the need to swap any of the middle things yet, but I’m starting to suspect my USB port has a loose pin or something so I’ll probably swap that module soon. Glad that I can.


These days, you can install any of the gaming focused distros (Bazzite, CachyOS, Nobara, …). And you didn’t have to do anything. It just works, and works well. Steam is either installed or suggested initially. Really trivial.


Password managers on Android (and frankly all platforms) actually try to avoid using the clipboard. They prefer the auto-fill service, which is intended for applications just like this. Unfortunately this isn’t working in all cases, but you can also set your password manager as a keyboard (temporarily), so it can directly input a selected username/password without anyone else seeing it.
Examples where I know this is the case are open source keepass options (Keepass2Android, KeepassDX). But I’d assume bitwarden and the like also work this way.


That really depends on how the VPN is setup and configured on the company side. In our case absolutely nothing breaks and it just works.


I know that isn’t the point of your comment, but what issues do you have with Logitech hardware on Linux? I have just mice from them, but honestly an embarrassing amount. I just use Solaar and I can configure all I need? I also have always only used the onboard memory (so I can move them between computers), and don’t really use macros though…


China also has over half of the world’s coal power generation. They are also still building more, just not as much as solar, but it’s still being added to. Coal power share in China fell in 2025 for the first time. But not because they reduced it, but it was the first time where they added enough solar/wind to outpace the adding of coal.
China also has quotas that require utility companies to buy a certain share of coal power. So you can’t get clean energy there by law, as individual or industrial user.
China also has the rare earths needed to produce batteries, from what I remember they sit on the largest reservers for them by quite a margin, but I don’t remember a source for that. So for them, adding battery based grid storage is easier than most of the world. Plus they are basically the only ones that even make any batteries anymore in the first place.
Version string on GitHub says 1.76.1 (as does the tag), but version of the app itself says 1.76.0. not a big deal, but does cause obtainiun to keep showing that there’s an update.
I agree that Windows is bad, and getting worse. But for them it works well enough. Idealistically, I’d like to move them over, but in practice there’s barely any benefit in it for an incredible amount of effort and (limited) time spent for anyone involved.
Recall isn’t a reason either, especially not with the banking argument: if they want to transfer money, they fill out a piece of paper, go to the bank and put it in a mailbox for those. They don’t do online banking. All they do is email, and one of them edits a couple of photos. They are used to the software that’s Windows-only. They know where on the screen to click. That’s it. It doesn’t matter if it’s Windows or not. I also have no argument they care about to convince them.
If i wasn’t on my phone I could write much more detailed explanation, but I am, so this will have to do.
I don’t own a Windows computer anymore. I’m self hosting the services I need (and have for a long time). Some subscriptions remain, but not to Microsoft, which I’ve never had.
My parents are still on Windows, as they are too old to switch. But they also don’t actively use anything from Microsoft, let alone cloud services. I could switch them, but I also don’t quite see the point. It’s just a lot of time and effort on my part, for no actual benefit.


Yes, in serious. I’m personally not much of a Lego collector and/or builder, but two close friends of mine are. They were big Lego fans and collectors for most of our lives (decades). I’d say 10-15 years ago they started to complain about declining QC and just generally lower quality. Molds were clearly used for much longer, parts having worse tolerance and either not fitting well or being lose. Then the creative side also got worse, with kits just not meeting previous standards either. Clearly just being cranked out for the sake of releasing something, often under license (Star wars, marvel or whatever).
Then when the patent ran out, some (select few) of the alternatives started to gain favor. Unfortunately I don’t remember who, but I can ask next time I see either of them. Not saying everything they make is great, but actually less problems with gas parts, and some kits are apparently just like old Lego.
I’ve run it on my last two laptops, everything just works. And I do mean everything. Special buttons, standby and all. I do run CachyOS (which is arch, btw), so it’s always recent, but I won’t think that’s a requirement these days.
I’m also sure there are laptops where that isn’t the case, but I don’t have them or know people who have them, so I can’t even say how common that is either.