[-] Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works 1 points 5 days ago

Thanks for your replies - I appreciate it. I think I'm staying on Chatterboxtown. The intermittent unreliability of phone calls is bothersome, but it's a known quantity to me. The migration, not as much. I come from corporate IT so I do redundant backups of everything.

3
submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works to c/sopranica@lemmy.ml

I currently have my business phone number on JMP through Chatterboxtown.us. Apparentlly, I now have a Snikket account set up to which I can migrate to, presumably for more reliable phone service. Problem is, I'm trying to learn what this entails and what to expect but I can't find any documentation to read through to learn. Since this is my business phone, I'm not interested in fumbling through it and learning along the way at the risk of losing service, stored messages, contact info, etc. The only thing I know is I can use the "invitation" from Snikket to get set up, but that isn't educational - it actually just creates questions.

Is there a migration guide out there somewhere that I'm missing to learn about this migration? I want to learn what happens to my message history, contacts, etc etc. I have a lot of customer history and contacts in this business account and I need to be confident what I'm actually doing.

Thanks!

[-] Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Showed up in the Pop! Shop today too. ๐Ÿ‘

[-] Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Same here, actually. I switched to Evolution a year or so ago from T-bird and I'm curious if v115 will leapfrog Evolution. I'm optimistic that it will.

31

Thunderbird 115 has been out over a week now and the lack of packaged versions, especially Flatpak, is beginning to raise eyebrows. Gotta admit, I've been curious at the lack of a Flatpak version since the day they announced it's "availability".

An article:

https://www.webpronews.com/thunderbird-leaves-linux-users-waiting-for-much-hyped-version-115/

Linux Cast episode:

https://invidious.protokolla.fi/watch?v=G-OvQw2JRWI

[-] Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

When a proposal is made by a person, a political party, a company, or an entity of any type we automatically (consciously or not) run their proposal through our personal filters to create a judgment about said proposal. So, when Fedora proposed telemetry I had to be aware of what my personal filters were and there were a few biases I had developed that make me uncomfortable with Fedora and their future use of telemetry: a) IBM b) Large companies have a dubious record of using user data ethically - they exist to make money and so if they have opportunities to do so, they will and that means the user data will get sold, aggregated, indexed for personal info, etc... if not immediately, IT WILL happen eventually.

Having been in leadership in large corporations for decades myself, the introduction of telemetry is presented as responsible and harmless enough so the pill is easy to swallow. The future of how that data is used and expands is the major concern for me; it's the exact situation of boiling a frog.

The individuals hoping to collect this telemetry may be great and ethical people wishing to do a net-good, however, these people are involved in a large organization with much larger powers and motives and so the original intent of doing only good with it will get lost. It can be no other way. I liked Fedora quite a lot but I recently switched upon hearing about their proposal - be it Opt-In or Opt Out was a moot point for me because I don't trust they would even honor my selection anyway. My two cents, which is worth about half that...

[-] Virtuous8897@sh.itjust.works 13 points 1 year ago

I was thinking I was going to wait until Fedora 40 was closer to launch before I migrated all my personal VM's over to Debian but I ended up doing it today to cut myself loose entirely of IBM's shenanigans. It's a shame about IBM leadership, but being in corporate leadership myself I'm certainly not surprised by any of their recent behavior. Where you have any large incentives (power, money, fame), you will see the uglier side of human nature.

1

I'm hoping @soller@lemmy.world or @mmstick@lemmy.world chimes in. I have a couple System76 machines and I checked them both within Coreboot to verify the IME is disabled, and they both say that it is. My question is, I've been watching this post https://blog.system76.com/post/major-updates-for-system76-open-firmware-june-2023 where it says there were issues in the past with disabling the IME and that updates should be coming with Coreboot to 're-disable' it. My question is, I'm now not sure if my IME's are disabled or not since my firmware versions date back to 2022 or so which is apparently the latest for both (based on this: https://github.com/system76/firmware-open/blob/master/FEATURES.md). But, can I trust what Coreboot is saying that IME is actually disabled since there's apparently a bug preventing the disablement?

Virtuous8897

joined 1 year ago