[-] leeloo@techhub.social 3 points 2 months ago

@tilvids@mstdn.social
Seems to me they have had a strategy since Firefox 4:

1: Move as many users to Chrome as possible.
2: Pull all value out of the company.
3: Let the remains burn.

[-] leeloo@techhub.social 2 points 2 months ago

@bagder@mastodon.social
Firefox download status: Downloading 200 KB per second, 2 MB remaining, expected done in 10 seconds.

15 minutes later: Still downloading 200 KB every second, still 2 MB remaining.

Curl, on the other hand, seems trustworthy. If it says the download will be done in 10 seconds, it's either done in 10 seconds, or the download speed will drop to zero.

Firefox and curl never felt similar.

[-] leeloo@techhub.social 2 points 9 months ago

@uienia
I was answering a question about what happens when it becomes unprofitable for "powerful actors that have a literal stranglehold on the market" to keep pumping money into maintaining that strangehold.

I expected it to be obvious that the first thing that happens is that they stop doing so. THEN there is room for others to improve things.

[-] leeloo@techhub.social -1 points 9 months ago

@ajsadauskas @pluralistic @technology
"So what happens if maintaining that archival footage becomes unprofitable?"

Things improve.

Youtube does not have a monopoly because it's the only video app installed on your computer, but because it's the one everyone uses.

Plenty of people have tried to compete, but Youtube was good enough. Others had good reasons to try but concluded that Youtube was good enough.

When Youtube is no longer good enough, they get to show they can do it better.

Google search is worse, because it hasn't been good enough for a long time, but somehow every competitor has decided to be worse. Altavista 25 years ago beat what Google search is today, I can't imagine Microsoft being unable to afford to bring Bing up to Altavista levels.

leeloo

joined 10 months ago