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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • simon574@feddit.detoTechnology@lemmy.world20 years of Gmail
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    7 months ago

    From the article:

    When you have enough storage that you never have to delete anything, you can keep an infinite record of your life. Packages, receipts, itineraries of past trips, messages from loved ones, photos, appointments, documents — you can just label them, archive them, and search for them later.

    I don’t want Google to have that information for free, to analyze/monetize/sell to 3rd parties. That’s one of the reasons why I quit GMail. It was difficult too because I was registered to literally 100s of websites with that address.


  • I’ve used both self-hosted Nextcloud, and an instance set up by my school. I have the client on two different Windows machines, and I can confirm the update either tries to kill explorer.exe, which doesn’t work half of the time, or forces a restart, so you’re not alone with this issue! I also hate the client UI and how it displays conflicted files when multiple people are accessing the same folder. The whole file sync thing feels like a poor attempt to copy Dropbox. My school discontinued Nextcloud support last year because hosting/maintenance took too many resources, they switched to Microsoft i.e. OneDrive and it works much better.











  • simon574@feddit.detoTechnology@lemmy.worldPerl still relevant in 2023/24?
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    1 year ago

    I played around with Perl when I was still in school, almost 20 years ago. Even then it was pretty legacy. I remember fixing a bug in a Perl script during an internship, because I was literally the only person in the whole department who could understand Perl code. I suppose it was used for sysadmin and web scripting but has since been replaced by PHP, Javascript and Python. I wouldn’t bet any money on Perl being relevant in the future.



  • Sorry I can’t help you, I don’t have any experience with Samsung phones. It could be that unlock codes don’t even work with this type of phone and you would have to connect it to a PC with a cable. But I don’t know. About your first question, the lock is usually put in place by the carrier, e.g. you get a “free” phone with a 2-year contract and they want to make sure you can’t use it with a different SIM. When the contract expires they want you to trade in your phone for a newer model, and renew your contract. It’s usually possible to have them unlock your phone at the end of the contract, sometimes for an additional fee. So it looks like you ended up with a phone that is still locked to a certain carrier and you can only use SIM cards of that carrier.