• @WhoRoger
    link
    English
    16
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    XMPP was always a bit weird for my taste and I doubt it would ever take off, but yea the idea was solid for the time.

    And so, the comparison is apt. Facebook and other shit company cannot enter Fediverse, or they’ll destroy it. And I don’t mean just spoil it or poison it with some toxic users, no, I mean they will literally destroy it, or at least make it unusable to the degree that everyone will be forced out (some possibly transferring to the Facebook cesspit).

    We’ve seen it time and time and again and again. People with the “wait and see” approach need only to look into the past, on the absolute wasteland of well-meaning open projects strangled by corporations.

    That’s not even getting into the principal differences of approach even if it was somehow in good faith. Like how do you reconcile Facebook’s real name policy or WhatsApp’s reliance on phone numbers and data harvesting with something like Lemmy? This is fucking absurd.

    Btw I get annoyed when people say there were no smartphones in 2005.

    • rigatti
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      What smartphones were out in 2005?

      • @WhoRoger
        link
        English
        3
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Sony Ericsson P800, P900, P910, with P990, M600 and W-something coming early 2006.

        Nokia 9000, 9100, 9300(i), 9500.

        Also tons of hybrid PalmOS and Windows Mobile (both touchscreen-based and keypad-based) devices that fit the definition.

        There were tons of them, and all were infinitely capable than the first couple generations of iPhone or Android.

        Heck, I could install a browser with Flash support on my M600.

      • @fubo
        link
        English
        21 year ago

        BlackBerry’s Java phones, notably.

        • @WhoRoger
          link
          English
          21 year ago

          Java was good already, but there were Symbian and Windows Mobile phones with native apps and crazy amount of functionality.

          Heck, a version of Windows Mobile 2003 was literally called “for Smartphone” and you could make Skype calls with it, never mind email.