• @BilboBargains
    link
    English
    322 months ago

    As engineers, we should never insert proprietary interfaces into our designs. We shouldn’t obfuscate the design.

    The motivation for these toxic practices comes from the business side because it’s profitable. These people won’t share the profits with you because they are psychopaths. Ultimately we are making more waste when electronics cannot be upgraded, maintained and repaired. It’s bad for people and it’s bad for the environment.

    • @TheGrandNagus
      link
      English
      17
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      So much stuff in both the hardware and software world really annoys me and makes me think our future is shit the more I think about it.

      Things could be so much better. Pretty much everything could be open and standardised, yet it isn’t.

      Software can be made in a way that isn’t user-hostile, but that’s not the way of things. Hardware could be repairable and open, without OEMs having to navigate a minefield of IP and patents, much of which shouldn’t have been granted in the first place, or users having no ability to repair or upgrade their devices.

      It’s all so tiresome.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        22 months ago

        I think Napoleon said something similar to “the army is commanded by me and the sergeants”?

        Well, not true anymore today. All this connectivity and processing power, however seemingly inefficiently they are used, allow to centralize the world more than it could ever be. No need to consider what sergeants think.

        (Which also means no Napoleons, cause much more average, grey, unskilled and generally unpleasant and uninteresting people are there now.)

        It’s about power and it happened in the last 15 years.

        I think it’s a political tendency, very intentional for those making decisions, not a “market failure” and other smartassery. It comes down to elites making laws. I feel they are more similar to Goering than to Hitler all over the world today.

        This post may seem nuts, but our daily lives significantly depend on things more complex and centralized in supply chains and expertise than nukes and spaceships.

        We don’t need desktop computers which can’t be fully made in, say, Italy, or at least in a few European countries taken together. Yes, this would mean kinda going back to late 90s at best in terms of computing power per PC, but we waste so much of it on useless things that our devices do less now than then.

        We trade a lot of unseen security for comfort.