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Garmin watches can start Spotify playback offline just fine. You need to have synced your playlist within last 30 days, IIRC, and that's it.


In my experience, fractional scaling and 4k support is finally fine on at least whatever GNOME and Wayland Ubuntu 20.04 ships with, with two major caveats:

* Chromium-based applications (the browser and Electron apps like VS Code) still don't know how to render themselves with fractional scaling and end up ever so slightly blurry (but correct sized) on fractionally scaled displays. Think like very old applications (like Control Panel) on Windows 10. I use Firefox so it doesn't bother me that much. There's a issue in Chromium bug tracker following this, but I can't find it right now.

* Screen sharing full screen or other windows than browser tabs doesn't work on Google Meet / MS Teams. This is and has been an issue in Wayland since forever.


> Chromium-based applications (the browser and Electron apps like VS Code)

This is most likely because they don't support Wayland. The scaling with XWayland doesn't really work great a lot of the time.

I don't use scaling for my 4K monitor, and just set text sizes larger. It feels a bit weird for a while but eventually it's actually quite a nice balance where the content is relatively larger vs. the chrome.


> * Screen sharing full screen or other windows than browser tabs doesn't work on Google Meet / MS Teams. This is and has been an issue in Wayland since forever.

Chrome has experimental Pipewire support; enable it in here: chrome://flags/#enable-webrtc-pipewire-capturer

Firefox (at least on Fedora) has enabled it out of the box.


Cool, I don’t use chrome or VSCode or chromium apps. And no ms teams or google meet either. Sounds like limitations I could live with.


Apple most definitely has no dominance for its smartphones anywhere. Even in US where it's larger than anywhere else, Apple's market share is much less than 50%.


In addition to nightly builds of TST, there's also an alternative called Tab Tree that works with 57 and is available right from the official Add-ons site:

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/tab-tree/


The Verge isn't doing its research (as usual): The blob emojis are not going anywhere (it's just the "people" emoji that are being changed). See screenshots at http://www.droid-life.com/2016/04/13/whats-new-in-android-n-... for example.


I don't think any toilet built here in Finland since at least the 50's (some of those still exist, earlier I'm not sure of) have needed a plunger either, those things just work. The US plunger thing just baffles me. And banking too, sure.


Why would you keep your FB posts public and not limited to your friends or to some subset of those (depending on what you are posting)?

Comments here seem to once again indicate as if everything posted to Facebook was automatically and irrevocably public. I don't really see that going on at least on my group of friends.


You can also be tagged in other people's posts, which you have to actively remove from photos (and I don't think it's possible to remove name-references in text at all).

Your group of friends is not a representative sample, and neither is mine.


There's a setting that makes tagging require you verify and accept the post/photo. I.e. when I turn it on, you can type the letters making up my name, but without my explicit consent given on a case-by-case basis, the name won't turn into a link to my profile. Not everyone enables it, but it's not an obscure feature either. Also, some combinations of privacy settings make you disappear from the tagging suggestion lists completely, but I haven't figured out how it works yet.


That setting doesn't help if you don't have a facebook account. Putting the responsibility on the named person is just another form of victim blaming.


I can't tag you if you don't have a Facebook account. What are you proposing? That typing someone's name without their consent should not be allowed? I think that would be seriously infringing on the right to write things.

> Putting the responsibility on the named person is just another form of victim blaming.

Victim blaming is quickly becoming a term for "I don't like how the reality works, so I'll just throw a temper tantrum".


> I can't tag you if you don't have a Facebook account.

I have no idea if that's true now. Historically, this was encouraged. I know my name has been added on pictures by my sister, at a minimum. I've never had an account at FB and never will. I'm assuming it is common knowledge on HN that just because you haven't registered an account with facebook doesn't mean your account doesn't exist.[1]

> That typing someone's name without their consent should not be allowed?

Obviously not. This thread is about credit scores, which facebook shouldn't be influencing based on hearsay. The bigger point is that "failure to opt-out" is not consent.

> Victim blaming is quickly becoming a term for "I don't like how the reality works, so I'll just throw a temper tantrum".

Absolutely not. Just because technology has allowed a power shift away from individual rights doesn't mean that's the way "reality works". The entire point of law is that we shape these aspects of society. It is not a "temper tantrum" to point out that responsibility doesn't fall upon the individual just because a rent-seeking corporation framed the discussion in that manner.

An easier to understand variant of this problem is so-called "identity theft". Nobody can steal your identity. They can impersonate you, but you still are the same person. The actual problem is e.g. banks giving loans to people without properly verifying the identity of the person. As a 3rd party, the bank has no valid reason to involve you in their, but by calling it "identity theft" they re-frame the situation as if was the your responsibility to keep your identity from being stolen (which is basically impossible).

[1] http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/03/report-facebook-t...


Facebook is gathering, processing, and storing my personal information (my name, my face) without my permission, and not acting when people ask them to stop processing and storing information about me.

That's probably not legal in EU.


> There's a setting that makes tagging require you verify and accept the post/photo.

Where is that?


Went and checked. There are two things you can do:

1) The second option on Settings/Privacy page controls how things you're tagged in end up on your timeline. On my account there's a link that to the Timeline Review page[0], on which you can enable or disable reviewing things before they become visible on your timeline.

2) There's a whole Settings page for Timeline and Tagging[1]. There you can control who can post on your timeline, how tagging you will work, whether your friends will see posts you get tagged in and whether or not you appear in tag suggestions. The tagging options work across Facebook, not just for your timeline.

[0] - https://www.facebook.com/INSERT_PROFILE_NAME/allactivity?log...

[1] - https://www.facebook.com/settings?tab=timeline


there's Timeline review (though I don't think it's exactly what he's saying, it lets pictures tagged with you avoid your wall unless you explicitly accept it)


What if it becomes a prerequisite to grant your bank or FICO access to your Facebook posts, as part of the loan application?


Or what if FB just decide to sell access to all posts (regardless of privacy setting on that post) to certain companies.

Could they do that? You'd probably have to read (and keep up with) the T&Cs.


Then you simply tell them that you don't have a Facebook account. If they find a private account with your name, you can tell them that it's not you.


If FB couldn't figure out who you are, they locked your account and required a photo of your driver's license or other state/national ID to verify identity.


It seems unlikely that this process will involve a human to intervene. Bots could do this easily, and could exploit things your friends share without you knowing. "I got super wasted with x last night" being posted or...

Or worse. They get access to those Facebook Messages?


I could see this starting as an opt-in for a little bump (of rate, score, etc.) in your favor, like how the car insurance companies give you a discount if you let them log your driving and it shows safe behavior (e.g. https://www.progressive.com/auto/snapshot/)


You can create user groups or G+ style circles on FB. For instance, I've got posts that only my friends see, most of them are also visible to my parents and very few are visible to acquaintances.

Add the representative of the bank to one of the limited visibility groups.

Not sure how that works when FB API is used.


Because _everyone_ has a facebook account? Bank/work somewhere else if the prerequisite is to have a facebook account that is accessible to people who are not your friends.

Alternatively, if you are genuinely worried about being able to do this, I would advise setting up a public profile separate from a personal one (cpt obvious).

I remember when it was a faux pas to put your real name on the internet - long live the days of having an alias that you can make a whole bunch of mistakes to a private group of friends without being publicly remembered for it.


Wasn't this a big thing years ago? Employers asking for your Facebook username and password during the interview process?

I seem to remember a lot of articles about that and then it just stopped.


It was followed up by a round of banning the practice: https://www.thesourcinginstitute.com/content/maryland-lawmak...

A rare outbreak of common sense in US labour law, although I suspect Facebook also lobbied for it - it's against their TOS to give your credentials to the interviewer.


A: "What Facebook profile?"


"I see. Lowest credit rating then."

Same as for us foreigners who don't have any credit rating records valid in US. Meaning you get the crappiest deals and worst apartments.


I'd rather just close my Facebook account.


You will be surprised how easy is to create second facebook profile.


A lot of people have all their posts public and either do not realise this, or don't know the implications of being fully public.


Why wouldn't you?

I post default-public, on purpose. I welcome everyone to stalk me on Facebook as much as they like and to comment on anything that's interesting for them. I have very little personal secrets I want to limit access to, and generally live a single life. I understand it's a privileged position, as I'm just a pretty average straight, white, male, cisgendered, neuro-sort-of-typical Western geek, but I see no reason to post private when I don't need it.

I understand most people limit posts to friends or friends-of-friends (the latter is I think the default setting on Facebook now), though this kind of annoys me when I want to learn something about a person I'm not friends with and see an empty profile, or when I want to share a post from one friend to another friend (usually in a private message, in the form of "look at this insightful post or funny picture I saw on my timeline"), but the former has the post visible to his friends only, and the latter isn't friend with them. There are trivial workarounds for last case though.

EDIT: I'm not telling anyone that they should go full-public. But OP seems to be bewildered by the fact that some people do in fact keep full-public profiles on purpose.


It's people like you who are telling the US government that it's ok to surveillance citizens. With your logic, you are saying you have no reason to hide anything, so the government can keep tabs on you. Just because you have nothing to hide doesn't mean you can become a victim of an error as well. Take this story http://www.wired.com/2015/10/familial-dna-evidence-turns-inn... where a man who "has nothing to hide" and innocent became the suspect in a murder due to him sharing similar DNA It could be you one day, you don't know.


Hey, I'm not telling the USGOV anything. I'm also pointing out that a lot of people have perfectly good reason to have default privacy level set to "full public", and it's neither weird or wrong. I responded to a HNer apparently bewildered by that fact.

I support you keeping whatever privacy level you like, but don't force me to hide things if I consciously, in full physical and mental capacity, decide I don't want to.


You are lucky.


I'm also the majority (sans the geek part).

In threads about Facebook I see people so focused on various minorities and corner cases that they act surprised by behaviour of people on Facebook, even though said behaviour is perfectly ok for the vast majority of Facebook's users. I think it's good to remind everyone that not everyone wants everything they do to be as private as possible, or has a reason to. In fact, most users don't.


Agreed. What's even more staggering is that Ultima Underworld 1 was actually released before Wolfenstein 3D, the predecessor to Doom! (March vs May 1992). Doom only came out December 1993.


> 3. The Fitbit HR (I wear it on my other wrist) is way better for telling time. I can hit the button and see the time faster than the 360 -- this has to change in some way for the 360 to be a smartWATCH.

This I find weird with both Moto 360 and Apple Watch - how can those be even considered as a useful watch if they don't show the time all the time? As a regular watch wearer I find it absolutely mandatory that the time can be seen always, even from small angles, without needing to touch the watch or do any wrist movements.

Any normal watch of course does this. Pebble, LG G Watch R and some other Android Wear watches do this.


> how can those be even considered as a useful watch if they don't show the time all the time?

The simple answer for me is that before I started wearing a watch again, I never really wanted a watch. So the reason I gravitated to a 360 is that I wanted the "smart" more than the "watch."

Of course, having a watch on my wrist made me want fast, instantly visible time/date...


Flash existed for Symbian OS (think Nokia smartphones) way before there was iPhones, and those devices naturally had even lower hardware specs.

(I still agree that not supporting Flash was the correct choice for Apple, though.)


The flash thing that existed for symbian was not "Flash", it was "FlashLite", a very different plugin that supported exactly 0 of all the .swf files I tried to throw at it, including even super simple animations.


> Flash existed for Symbian OS (think Nokia smartphones) way before there was iPhones, and those devices naturally had even lower hardware specs.

I'm well aware! I had an HP iPaQ "Pocket PC" for a long time, and you could run a stripped-down version of Flash on it. But it ran slowly, and it only really worked for simple animations. You couldn't use something like YouTube on it, and it's things like YouTube that were the killer app for Flash.


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