A few years ago I became interested in operating systems that are positioned off the main stream; in other words: That are not Linux, macOS or Windows but still usable as a desktop OS. And since BSD is so well known, I exclude it from the list of systems I will write about here, too. I've started to write about alternative OSs over two years ago. But I didn't find the time and energy to actually look at much and write about it at that time. I've decided to start anew with this entry and put my reviews, tests and introductions of OSs under the topic top:Software:Alternative Operating Systems. You may ignore everything that I've previously written about this topic.
Alternative Operating Systems
Entry created on 2024-11-03
Authors: steeph (337)
Categories: #100DaysToOffload (41)
Computer (75)
Operating Systems (21)
Software (50)
Languages used: en (189)
Topics: Software → Alternative Operating Systems (18)
MikeOS
A very limited and simple operating system written in assembler for 286 computers (and newer compatible architechtures, obviously). Pretty much what I would imagine as a successful outcome if I would write one to see that I can do it. It works, there's a text editor, a game, you can list, edit and execute files. Not much more though at first glance. I didn't look into writing additional software for it myself, yet. There are many forks of MikeOS. Most of them named after the forker and not under active development. It's a project I'd look into if I'd want to learn x86 assembler. Simple, not looking like any other OS I've seen.
MikeOS is neither UNIX-like in any way nor is it similar to CP/M or DOS. It is closer to being a BASIC interpreter with a program menu. But there is a bit more to it. Everything is in the same text mode in VGA resolution. After booting, you get a box with list of menu items in pointing to submenus or executable programs. Among those programs are a BASIC interpreter, some simple games, a text editor and a file browser. That's about the gist of what you get. It's all very simple and fast. Enough to write your own applications or scripts. And it all fits on a single 3.5" HD floppy. There are third-party applications to be found on the internet. But almost all that I stumbled upon were part of MikeOS forks.
Next to the menu there is also a command line with a very small list of commands. To be honest, from a user point of view, I don't know what to do with it.
There are quite a few forks. It seems to be a great hobby project. And because it's all relatively simple it's a project you can actually finish after a while, not like writing your own UNIX clone with system tools, glibc port and modern GUI. MikeOS forks usually come with some additional apps and scripts and some changes in UI. Some add to the few system calls, add their own menu. Some even started to add network support. One MikeOS fork I have to mention is MichalOS because it overhauled the UI to make it more pleasing and added quite a few simple apps and games that all seem to be very stable. It has an image viewer and a music program. TomOS is a fork that adds support for directories. ShoockOS seems to be about simplifying things even more.
On the MikeOS web site there are handbooks, resources for development and links to software projects for MiikeOS. MikeOS is a great help if you want to learn x86 assembly in a practical way without starting from zero. But it is also useful as an OS for embedded applications or simple hobby projects (interacting with Arduino, other serial communication tasks, …). And it could also be considered useful for everyday tasks if you found a home computer from the mid 80s useful.
tba: creenshots
A Document-centric Web
Entry created on 2024-11-01
Authors: steeph (337)
Categories: #100DaysToOffload (41)
Search Engines (1)
Web Browsers (5)
Web Sites (6)
World Wide Web (10)
cat (1)
incomplete (33)
Languages used: en (189)
I've been thinking about what exactly it is that is wrong with the WWW and what to do about it. It feels like it became worse over the years. It's easy to make out individual reasons: Walled gardens, ad-centric web sites, bad mass-generated and LLM-generated at the top of all web searches, the lack of search results from small, personal web sites without an SEO budget or the malicious will to implement all the SEO tricks for the sake of it, egoistic algorithms (that push harmful and hateful content because it makes them feel good). Thinking about how these things became the way they are is sometimes interesting and may help by teaching a lesson. But it doesn't really bring us closer to a solution. I've had a few thoughts about what does, though. It's not as complicated as I make it sound here. It's just that I needed to think about it to be sure what I even want. And that is for the web to be made of documents with hyperlinks. If it is a text document, a searchable database, a set of image, a list of things, an article with pictures and audio samples, a video file that I can download and play, a tree of links to other documents or something similar to those, then it is something for the world wide web. If it is an application, it's not a document for the web. It's impossible to draw ab exact line here. But that's the general rule for me now. It's not that web apps shouldn't exist. People make then and people like using them. So that's fine. But that's not what the web was made for and not what I personally want when browsing the web. It's one thing that photo editors, t-shirt designers, CAD software, action games and all those things exist. You can use them or not. But it has become so normal that web sites are huge and require JavaScript to even load that sites started being huge and require JS even though it's not necessary to serve their purpose. And that has become normal, too, by now.
What can you do?
I've came to believe that there is no route to turning the web into the web that resembles my vision of a good web. It's not even just that I don't think that I (together with similar-mimded people) can't obtain the power to force the usage of certain software or to form habits in others. I don't think it would be a sustainable way with a lasting positive effect on the web. That doesn't mean that there aren't ways to bring others to use better alternatives to walled gardens, closed networks, sites with lots of ads and only 10 % content, sites that use dark patterns and search engines of the oligopositic type. You can promote small projects, share links to useful and interesting sites, talk about how you use the web, make it normal to use a search engine that doesn't only find bloated, commercial, SEO optimised sites. You can start your own projects, enrich the market with libre and other non-commercial software, submit pages to search engines with a curated index, create good content for alternative search engines to find. In this entry I'd like to talk about what I do to change my own experience of the web to the better, though, not about making the web better for everybody.
What I do for now
I needed to think about web things a lot before I realised how much of my own web experience I can change by making certain choices and how viable it can be to simply not use certain services. It's not a new idea to me. I don't do Windows, I use alternative front-ends to YouTube, I've used various unconventional operating systems on PCs and phones. But in regards to the web I thought that it's not that simple. Web sites are how they are and even nice web sites link to bloated pages with megabytes of unhelpful CSS and megabytes of maliscious JavaScript. If I use a browser that is fast and doesn't do JavaScript, my web experience is worse than it is with Firefox (I prefer LibreWolf, btw). Whenever I tried Dillo, Nersurf or something similar, or when I disabled JavaScript in Firefox, I didn't get along with at least some pages. It doesn't appear to be easy to simply decide accept that some pages don't work and just go on to the next one. There surely are use cases where this is not acceptable. But for the usual usees - everyday browsing and casual research - that shouldn't be a problem considering I already accept that some pages aren't accessible because I don't want to register with them. In a sense it's my fault that I don't like how the web is today. It's me who keeps visiting web sites that are like that. And I can stop that by doing some simple changes: Disable JavaScript and use a search engine that prefers non-commercial web sites in its search results.
Really?
Don't get me wrong: I doesn't feel like an improvement to disable JavaScript entirely. There are browser extensions that let you control what page is allowed to serve scripts and what you want to execute. I've tried that, but it's complicated to get it right and frustrating because you always have to configure stuff while browsing and that never stops. But maybe it is an improvement despite not feeling like one at first. I mean, quitting to take drugs to which your brain has developed a strom chemical dependency also is often a worse experience than continuing to take them. But also often it's worth getting used to not taking them anymore. It also doesn't seem like an improvement to only use search engines with tiny indexes that rarely return with the ideal search result you hoped for. Maybe this isn't a viable choice. I think there is no search engine of that type with a large enough index to recomment it for daily use. Those projects just aren't there, yet. But that may just be one more reason to use and support them more. And since they do get rid of all the sites that do things that I don't like, it could be an improvement to get used to using them.
What does that mean in practice?
Some web sites don't have any images anymore, some web sites only load ads and recommendations, but not the actual article, modern closed-plattform chat apps don't work, just as most other sites that can be calles web apps, keyboard focus doesn't start at the main input field, some sites aren't readable because all their styles are missing, burrying the content between or under thousands of things that should have started out hidden, on some sites certain links aren't working anymore, many audio and video players don't work because of attempts to prevent permanent file downloads, there are pretty much no ads. If you use a browser with a less than very popular rendering engine, add misaligned elements on many to almost all web sites, unreadable elements on some sites with unconventional styling and missing elements if they use unusual positioning options. If you only use a search engine that doesn't do commercial sites or whitelists desirable sites, add to that the feeling of trying out the web in 1995 unless you navigate to specific sites that you know contain what you are looking for. The web feels relatively small with a search engine like that. But even then it's huge. Maybe it's a quiestion of what you expect. If you really don't know what site you are looking for, use a universal search engine. If you have an idea where to find the information you are looking for, start at that site. It might be Wikipedia, Slashdot, Toms Hardware, an Invidious instance. The web is totally usable if you don't enter everything in the same search engine as a lefrex. I thought it was great at a time where we didn't do that. And for the rest (missing content, non-working sites): Those tend to be the sites that I wanted to filter out in the first place. So the endeavour seems to work as intended.
There are also sites that I would like to read that just happen to use a CSS trick or JavaScript that isn't supported by all browsers. Those are sites that don't pay a lot of attention to accessability design guides but don't have any bad intentions. I've made sites like this before. This article is being posted to sites that fall in this category. Feel free to contact makers of those sites to let them know that you would appreciate being able to read the pages. I know I should test a site in text browsers before publishing them. I never do. Nowadays I don't even test in any other browser than the main one that I'm using (except when using engine-specific style rules). We came to accept that it just looks the same in all browsers. That is something that web designers always wished for. And when Microsoft's browsers improved in this regard it felt like we were there. But it is also true that most users of the web use a browser with one of two/three engines (depends on where you make the cut and call it a new engine after a fork). I think it does still make sense to test a web site in different browser engines. It doesn't have to look great in a text browser (although that would be the best), but maybe Dillo and NetSurf. If you cover those two, you cover pretty much everybody and you don't even have to test the site in Firefox or Chromium.
So, what did I change? For work: Nothing. Corporate dictates what software I use for what. On my private laptop, I currently use NetSurf as my main web browser. I use LibreWolf for two purposes: Copy individual bookmarks or URLs from open tabs, and go to sites that don't work in NetSurf when I don't have the time to find an alternative solution. For chat apps I use their "native apps" although I suspect that they are all just the web app shipped with their own browser. For social media I'm trying out different mastodon/fediverse clients for Linux, which I wanted to do for a while anyway. For search I'm currently using various Searx/SearXNG instances. (I know, not that alternative. I don't want to ruin everything at once for me.) More than recently I deliberately navigate to a specific site instead of using a search engine and ending up on a site that I already knew. When looking for something on eBay, I don't find as many interesting things like before because the pictures are missing and I don't needlessly buy things as much now. When searching for some random information or doing some curiosity research I close many search results directly or very soom after opening them because they aren't displayed properly. So far that doesn't bother me much. I'm already used to having to close tabs again right away because of cookie banners and other popups that make it impossible to get to the content without finishing a maze and reading a bunch of things for at least a minute. Not I open and close more search results, but get my ansers anyway. On video platforms, I open the video in an external player. It's nicer to have the player of my choice with my prefered UI and my custom configuration anyway. Some sites simulaniously look worse and better at the same time. I may have to scroll a bit to the content and it is obvious that the page wasn't designed to look exactly like that. But at least I don't get any grafical animations, lots of side-loaded unrelated content or ads. For shopping my options are very narrow. I already stopped using Amazon for other reasons a while ago. It's really not as much of a hassle as people seem to think. But much more shops than I expected rely on JavaScript for purchasing or logging in nowadays. (Probably at least for a CAPTHA.) It's pretty much all, actually. According to my rule from earlier, those are apps though, and there would be better ways to implement those. So, I don't have a solution other than switching back to LibreWolf or an app on my phone when I need to buy something online. So far, I didn't actually need anything, though. For online banking, sending a message to my insurance, using the Wayback machine and I predict much more, it is the same. For some things I will try to find alternatives. For others I will realise I don't have to. For some sites that I want to consume for enternainment it's disappointing when they don't work. There are so many alternaives for entertainment in all categories. I have so many ebooks, web books, audio books, lecture recordings, podcasts, … that I would like to consume when I get the time and energy to, I really don't need whatever interesting thing I've just found or somebody has just recommended. But now that I know it's there, I don't want to miss out. So far, this has been largest part of my negative experience after switching. But I haven't been at it for long. I'm curious to see how this will go for me.
(tba:links to previous entries, external links)
crAzy!modz
Entry created on 2024-10-27
Authors: steeph (337)
Categories: #100DaysToOffload (41)
Case Modding (11)
Computers (14)
DIY (15)
Web Sites (6)
Languages used: de (79)
Topics: Projects → Web Sites → Discontinued (4)
In den 2000er-Jahren habe ich gerne Webseiten für Projekte gebaut, die ich vor hatte, mit anderen oder alleine, zu in einen Zustand zu bringen, in dem sie Content für eine Webseite abwerfen würden. Begonnene und nie auf einen vorzeigbaren Stand fortgeführte Projekte waren schon damals ein Ding in meinem Leben. So haben die meisten Webseiten, die ich zu der Zeit gebaut habe, nie ihren Weg auf einen öffentlich zugänglichen Webserver gebracht. Daher habe ich einige offensichtlich sehr unfertige Webseiten, die zu erwähnen ich keinen Sinn sehe. Kürzlich bin ich über ein Backup unter anderem davon gestoßen. Eine Seite war aber darunter, über die ich gerne ein paar Sätze verlieren würde.
crAzy!modz war der Name, den wir für die Webseite gewählt haben, auf der wir unsere Case-Modding-Resultate sowie Tipps für einzelne Mods präsentieren wollten. "Wir" meint dabei drei junge Menschen aus Bad Dürkheim, die nichts als ihr interesse für Case Modding verbandt.
Unter denen meiner Webseiten aus dieser Zeit, die nie einen Zustand errecht haben, in dem ich sie veröffentlichen wollte, ist c!m wahrscheinlich die am weitesten fortgeschrittene. Als ich sie neulich wiederfand dachte ich sogar daran, den bisher darin enthaltenen Content ein klein wenig aufzubereiten und alle Platzhalter und Links auf noch nicht gefüllte Seiten zu entfernen. Danach wäre die Seite tatsächlich vorzeigbar, auch wenn sie nicht das kollaborative Projekt darstellen würde, das ich hoffte, dass aus ihr werden würde. Aber der Nutzen ihres Inhalts wäre nicht groß genug um mich dazu zu bewegen, die Peinlichkeit einzugehen, meine Texte von damals zu veröffentlichen. Da müsste ich schon noch weitere Modding-Tipps und How-Tos ergänzen. Und diese Inhalte würde ich heute eher hier veröffentlichen. Ich werde einfach diesem Eintrag hier einen Screenshot oder drei Anhängen und die Sache dann weitestgehend wieder vergessen. Die Bedeutung des Wortes "Nutte" werde ich einfsch mal nicht erklären.
Das A in crAzy!modz ist großgeschrieben, weil ich ursprünglich die kleine Variante des Logos (auch für's Favicon) ein großes A in einem Kreis machen wollte. Die beiden anderen Beteiligten waren aber nicht so freundlich mit den Ideen des Anarchismus, weshalb diese Variante des Logos nicht in der Webseite enthalten ist.
Die Seite enthielt ein Showcase von Casemods des Teams (Beispiel im Anhang), Ideen für kleine Mods (runde IDE-Kabel, individuelle Lüftergitter, in Software schaltbare Beleuchtung), Links zu anderen Modding-Seiten und hätte noch viel Platz für aufwendigere Mods und detailliertere HowTos gehabt. Meine Wahrnehmung war, dass ich gerne weiter an dem Projekt gearbeitet hätte, wenn positives Feedback mir den nötigen Ansporn dazu gegeben hätte. Damals wusste ich noch nicht, dass alle meine Projekte so verlaufen würden.
Die Seite dürfte eine der letzten gewesen sein, die ich in Hand und mit Frames geschrieben habe. Ich mag den Stil noch genau so sehr wie damals. Grün auf Dunkelgrau, Links, deren Hintergrundfarbe sich beim Hovern ändert: Sehr cool.
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Selbstbild
Entry created on 2024-10-19
Authors: steeph (337)
Categories: #100DaysToOffload (41)
Migration (1)
Selbstbild (1)
Languages used: de (79)
Letztens habe ich mich mit jemandem unterhalten, der eine Sicht auf seine Rolle als Deutscher mit Migrationshintergrund in der Deutschen Gesellschaft hat, die ich, in diesem Ausmaß, noch nie zuvor wahrgenommen habe. Er bezeichnet sich selbst als Kanacke, wenn er seine Wahrnehmung seiner Position in der Gesellschaft beschreibt, um deutlich zu machen, dass ihm bewusst ist, wie er häufig wahrgenommen wird. Er wurde beim Autofahren schon oft angehalten, nur um ihm nach einem Fahrerlaubnischeck mit der Bitte, vorsichtig zu sein, wieder weiterfahren zu lassen. Eine Erfahrung, die ich als weißer Deutscher, obwohl ich jahrelang Vialfahrer war, nie gemacht habe. Ich weiß aber aus anderen Gründen zumindest, wie es ist, an Bahnhöfen und auf großen Plätzen von der Polizei, meiner Meinung nach anlasslos, kontrolliert zu werden. Man gewöhnt sich dran und wenn es zu viel wird beginnt man, sich unauffälliger zu kleiden und so zu verhalten, wie man vermutet, dass es von einem erwartet wird. Als Weißer habe ich die Option, dieses Spiel so weit mitzuspielen, dass ich gar nicht mehr kontrolliert werde. Aber wer als Außenseiter behandelt wird, ohne etwas dagegen tun zu können, lernt, sich mit dieser Rolle zu identifizieren. Genau so verhält es sich, so nehme ich an, wenn einem immer wieder gezeigt wird, dass man als Gefahr, als verdächtig oder als jemand, der beobachtet, kontrolliert und in Schach gehalten werden muss, betrachtet wird. Es wird Teil der Identität, die auch aus dem Selbstbild mit geformt wird, das andere einem aufdrängen.
Das alleine wäre schon genug, um darüber nachzudenken und daraus Schlüsse für viele Aspekte des eigenen Lebens zu ziehen. Den nächsten Teil der Unterhaltung aber habe ich als Anlass genommen, das hier zu schreiben. Es fühlt sich wie ein Geständnis an jetzt zu sagen: Mit so einer Sichtweise habe ich nicht gerechnet. Offenbar ist er selbst davon überzeugt, dass zu einer Rasse gehört, die in der Gesellschaft weniger zu sagen hat, als "deutsche" Deutsche, dem Schicksal, Verbrechen leicheter zu verfallen, als Weiße, ausgeliefert ist und aufgrund ihres Neurotyps weniger wert ist, als leistungsfähige "richtige" Bürger. Die Überzeugung, dass er für mindestlohn arbeiten muss, sich einer Peergroup, die zu Gewaltverbrechen neigt, zugehörig fühlen muss und Auto fahren muss, wie ein Geisteskranker auf Todesfahrt, um seiner Identität zu entsprechen, scheint groß zu sein.
Meine Gedanken zu dem Thema waren seit letztens vielfältig, führen aber zu nichts, was ich als brauchbar bezeichnen möchte. Ich müsste noch mal mit anderen darüber reden.
So, I've hand this device with the weirdly complicated name spelling for a while now. But I haven't used it as my main phone since recently because I first wanted to flash a different OS onto it. I didn't have the capacity/time to take care of that among other reasons because it's something that I've rarely done, and never before successfully. After several failed attempts to get /e/OS to run on it, I've now settled fore LineageOS. Since I want to use it as my main phone from now on I don't think I'll experiment with any other systems on it for now, even though it would be the perfect phone to get some experience with Ubuntu Touch, Sailfish or some other Linux Distro.
Battery
The last time I've written about this device it looked like the battery was affected too much by having been empty for years, notz even allowing the phone to charge its own battery. Android suddenly shut down seemingly randomly and had 3 to 20 % battery when turning it back on minutes later evewn though it displayed 30 to 50 % when it turned off. Sometimes it displayed a higher battery charge after turning back on than when it turned itself off. Sometimes it would last less than five hours usage before it went down. This became better over time. It seems that Android became better at guessing the current battery charge. Now on LineageOS the battery doesn't last a whole day when it's used a lot, but so far it didn't do any surprise jumps or shutdowns. Technically, it lasts a bit over 24 hours with moderate usage. But that is with the last couple of hours under a warning LED (if I hadn't turned that off). According to the LineageOS settings, the battery is healthy and has 100% of its original capacity of 3313 mAh. That would be 113 mAh more than advertised. Maybe I'm just too spoiled by my previous 4000+ mAh devices with smaller and low-rews displays. I didn't do any independent measurement yet. (Edit: More on that in the last part of this entry.)
Keyboard
Probably the most important thing of this phone is the keyboard that makes it unique on today's marked. It is very similar to those of the later Nokia smartphones that still had keyboards. I sort of see it as an N900 with more room for a larger keyboard. It is crammed, but none of the keys are too hard too reach. Not even the number row, that has smaller keys very close to the screen. And every key on this board has a good reason to be there. As somebody coming from a Unihertz Titan Pocket with a Blackberry-style keyboard with a very reduced layout, I'm glad not only punctuatioin and number keys but also for proper arrow keys and four modifier keys of which the ones that are used as lot appear twice. I chose a German keyboard layourt because I'm used to it and can find every symbol I need on it, and it's useful to have the extra letters when I write in German. The Android it came with had only one German QUERTZ layout to select and it didn't match the labeling exactly. Some special characters were switched or missing, and it couldn't produce an apostrophe (') by any means. With LineageOS there is a 'F(x)tec QUERTZ' and that works perfectly now. After the first getting used to they keyboard is a delight to type on compared to any other phone I held in my hands in the last 5 years. I think I still like the Nokia N9300 and N9500 keyboard better. But the more layout closer to PCs does make more sense with a phone where apps aren't developed for that keyboard specifically. And I am enjoying the extra keys, especially on the command line. The backlight also works as one would expect, which is not a given in keyboard smartphones.
Camera
Let's not get into it too much. The camera isn't good. 48 MP doesn't mean anything when every picture that it produces is automatically heavily mushed by noise reductin. It's better than my last phone camera. It's able to produce photos with room light that aren't blurred to the point where you can't read anything. That's enough for me right now. It does have the bug where the camera app gets rotated when you open the phone (which forces all apps into landscape mode), but the image isn't rotated, but its dimensions are. The viewfinder isn't really usable with the keyboard open. But it's not as bad as it is with the Planet Computer phones/PDAs.
Display
Once a smartphone display has reached a certain quality, I don't have much to say about it. And that quality point has been matched even in cheap phones for years. It's bright enough, resolution is high enough, I don't know or care about the maximum frame rate, colours seem fine, viewing angle isn't an issue (very good actually), touch resolution is fine enough that it isn't a problem. It does have black spots in some corners. Apparently that is something that can happen when you bend a panel that maybe isn't advanced enough to be bent that much. The rounded edges are nice though and I don't mind the black spots as long as they aren't growing. I've never accidentally activaterd the touch screen while typing.
Fingerprint Sensor
It's located below the power button on the right. I haven't found a comfortable way of using it to unlock the phone, yet. Maybe I won't use it. It's irritating how often it thinks it's been used when I handle the phone and vibrated he phone. Sometimes it's locked for too many failed attempts once I actually want to use it.
Exterior
As for ports, there are two: USB-C and a headset jack. No more or less than necessary. There's one fingerprint sensor. There are four buttons: Power, volume up, volume down and camera. And then there's a SIM and SD card tray.
Sound
It has stereo speakers, which are actually placed on opposite sides, facing left and right when in landscape mode. They are loud enough and sound like phone speakers sound nowadays: clear, without any surprises and enough bass to not miss it during any sort of speech recording. The position of the speakers could be worse. They arent covered when the phone rests on somthing and they can't be accidentally covered both at the same time. But they aren't facing you directly and can't possibly both face you at the same time. So the sound will always be roomy if both speakers are on. Their distance also creates a problem that I've rarely heard in a phone: If both ar producing the same or almost the same sound waves, parts of them will cancel each other out before the reach your ears, especially if the phone isn't exactly in the middle between your ears and exactly horizontal and straight. At 50 cm distance, if you want to watch a video with sound, in order to understand ecerything, you have to turn up the volume so much that others in the room are wondering why you're watching at that volume. At least I have to and I would wonder. My solution is to turn one of the speakers off almost completely. One is still loud enough usually. In Google's Android the audio settings are hidden in advanced accessibility settings. On LineageOS audio adjustments are directly on the accessibility settings screen. Set to mono you'll still hear everything. The setting does not influence bluetooth earphones.
Practical Usage
Whether the screen is activated by opening the keyboard or by pressing the power button, it takes a second until the screen comes on. That's annoying, but I'm going to get used to it. It's the case with both stock Android and LineageOS.
For daily usage so far it has been great, except for the battery life. Once I've stopped downloading and installing lots of stuff every day and trying things out it has become better. Also I think the battery charge indication has been caribrated. Because it doens't turn off with two digits of battery charge left. I'be decided to go with the battery enabled all the time. This way it lasts well over one day, even when I use it a bit more than usual. According to both the phones own and my measurement the capacity is almost exactly as advertised. (4 to 13 mAh more. I didn't factor in the voltage.) But the fact that it's runtime is at least a third shorter than that of by previous phone (with a smaller battery) makes me think it that the screen and other parts are probably not as energy efficient. I glady charge it more often for the experience with the better keyboard.
Ein Wahnsinnsroman
Entry created on 2024-10-02
Authors: steeph (337)
Categories: #100DaysToOffload (41)
Books (1)
Menschenangst (1)
Languages used: de (79)
Also, ich mach' ja keine Buchempfehlungen. Also, eigentlich. Dazu hab' ich auch gar nich' genug Ahnung von Büchern. Oder von Literatur und so. Und ich les' ja auch fast nie ein Buch. Deswegen will ich eigentlich immer gleich empfehlen, was ich gelesen habe, weil es immer was besonderes für mich is'. Aber mach' ich dann halt nie, weil das wäre einfach nur eine Liste von Büchern, die ich mal gelesen habe, was nicht von Qualität oder anderen guten Eigenschaften des Buchs zeugt, sondern nur der Tatsache, dass es mir mal unter kam und sich mir nicht in einer abstoßenden Art präsentierte. Für dieses hier mach' ich jetz' aber mal 'ne Ausnahme, weil es mir so vor kommt, als sei dieser Humor irgendwie so kleinnieschen-füllend, dass es wahrscheinlich nicht groß durch alle Blogs und Fediverse-Teilnehmer rum-empfohglen wird. Das wurde es bestimmt als es 2011 raus kam (bei Dumont), als sein Autor auf Twitter eine recht große Folgschaft hatte. Da hab' ich auch beschlossen, es zu kaufen. Ca. 6,7 Jahre später kam ich dann auch endlich mal dazu. Noch mal ca. 6,7 Jahre später kam ich dann auch endlich mal dazu, es zu lesen. Und ich wurde nicht enttäuscht. Das Buch ist tatsächlich so verrückt und lustig, wie sich sein Autor damals auf Twitter gab.
Ach, ich sollte mal sagen, wovon ich rede. Entschuldogen Sie meine Störung von Jan-Uwe Fitz (Ich weiß bis heute nicht, wozu er einen Doppelname hat. Aber muss er ja wissen.) trägt den Untertitel "Ein Wahnsinssroman", vermutlich um darauf hinzuweisen, dass der Autor wahnsinnig ist, oder der Protagonist. Wobei nahegelegt wird, dass zwischen den beiden so absolut gar kein Unterschied besteht. Der Protagonist referenziert im Buch selbst, eben dieses gerade zu schreiben. Also muss ich doch davon ausgehen, dass an keiner Stelle darin irgendwelche Übertreibungen oder rein dem Witz oder der Absurditätssteigerung dienenden Falschbehauptungen vorkommen. Das beides doch tatsächlich der Fall ist macht einen Teil des Reizes aus. Etwa wenn er von Misshandlunegn durch seine Eltern in seiner Kindheit erzählt, ist es vorstellbar, dass derartige Dinge in manchen Haushalten wirklich passieren oder so erinnert werden. Mit Humor darüber sowohl zu schreiben als auch zu stehen ist auch eine Möglichkeit, die ich niemandem absprechen möchte. Absurd-extreme Reaktionen und Geschichten sind aber so häufig, dass selbst ich mit meiner Nativität annehmen muss, dass ein nicht gerade kleine Portion Fiktion in die Geschichten eingeflossen sein muss, um mein Menschenbild aufrecht erhalten zu können. Ich kann nur vermuten, dass vieles auf wahren Begebenheiten beruht und echte Erlebnisse in Geschichten ein- oder zu solchen verarbeitet wurden. Da ich als Leser den Unterschied nicht ausmachen kann, habe ich das ganze Buch als einen Roman betrachtet, der der Unterhaltung dienen soll. Ich finde, so präsentiert er sich auch.
Wenn die Förster ein Einsehen mit uns Paranoikern hätten, würden sie mehr Spiegel in deutschen Wäldern anbringen. Solche Spiegel, wie sie im deutschen Straßenverkehr an Schwer einzusehenden Kreuzungen un Einfahrten hängen. Dann könnten wir früh genug hinter die Bäume blicken und würden, falls wir dort einen Räuber erspäten, entweder einen anderen Weg einschlagen oder, falls die Luft rein ist, beruhigt weiter unserer Wege gehen. Aber wir Paranoiker haben keine so starke Lobby wie die Autofahrer.
Jan-Uwe Fitz, im Netz auch bekannt als Der Taubenvergrämer (@vergraemer@twitter.com) gehtz sehr offen damit um, dass er selbst mit einer Menschenangst ausgestattet ist, die sein ganzes Leben und seinen Alltag stark beeinflusst. Sicherlich ist vieles in dem Buch auch eine Art Aufarbeitung von Erlebtem und fantasiertem. Die kompromisslos absurde Fantasie, der augenscheinlich in keiner Situation Einhalt geboten wird, prägt jede Geschichte des Buchs. Konversationen, die an britische Sketch-Shows aus den 80ern (Jaja, ich meine Monthy Python, weniger das, was versucht hat, deren Erfolg nachzubilden.) oder den frühen 90er erinnern, aber auf deutsch halt und mit einer Prise Wahnsinn, die der Protagonist doch oft sehr offensiv anspricht.
Ausschnitt aus einem längeren Dialog:
»Sie klingen sehr erfahren. Sind Sie schon häufiger Amok gelaufen?«
»Nein, zum ersten Mal. Finden Sie, ich mache das gut?«
»Ja, aber was mich noch interessieren würde: Man hat ja nicht immer die Chance, einen Amokläufer nach seinen Motiven zu befragen. Also: Spielen Sie viele Computerspiele?«
»Gar nicht.«
»Dann kann das nicht der Grund sein.«
»Nein, ich gebe der Gesellschaft die Schuld. Zu viele Menschen, die in meiner Gegenwart laut telefonieren zum Beispiel.«
»Das ist ein Motiv. Aber sagen Sie: Müssten Sie nicht vielleicht etwas fester zudrücken? Damit ich keine Luft mehr bekomme?«
»Sie bekommen noch Luft?«
»O ja. Hören Sie mal.«
Ich atme tief ein und aus wie ein Patient, der von seinem Arzt mit dem Stethoskop abgehört wird.
»Sie erstaunen mich. Sie zäher Hund. Dann sollte ich tatsächlich noch stärker zudrücken.« Herr Menke wirkt leicht verunsichert. »Wenn Sie am Ende nicht tot sind, ist so ein Amoklauf ja auch blöd.«
Er drückt nun tatsächlich etwas fester zu.
»Und? Jetzt besser?«
»Joh, etwas«, presse ich angestrengt hervor, weil er tatsächlich stärker zudrückt. »Aber sagen Sie mal: Darf ich mich als Opfer eigentlich wehren, oder gibt es Amoklaufkonvbentionen, die ich zu beachten habe?«
»Nein, das hängt vom Be-Amokten ab. Das muss jeder für sich entscheiden.«
Der erste Teil des Buchs ist eine gut sortierte Sammlung von Kurzgeschichten. Richtig kurz manchmal. Für eine Sketch-Show ohne Regeln genau das richtige. Interessante Momente und abstruse Gedanken, die vermutlich mal raus mussten. Der gemeinsame Kontext ist das Leben des Protagonisten, aus dem die Geschichten stammen. Der zweite Teil ist eine längere, zusammenhängende Geschichte über das Bestreben einen guten Therapieplatz zu bekommen/in eine Nervenheilanstalt einzubrechen und sich einen freien Platz zu ermorden. Der dritte Teil ist kurz. /p>
Oft nahm mich mein Vater zur Seite und sagte »Sohn, du hast so viele Ängste. Mach etwas aus ihnen.« Dann zuckte er zusammen, weil er durch mein Kinderzimmerfenster die Birke im Vorgarten sah. »Siehst du«, sagte er traurig. »Ich habe nur meine Angst vor Bäumen. Aber in dir steckt so viel mehr. Du bist voller so wunderbarer Phobien. Ich werde dich moren in der Störungsstelle anmelden, damit deine Talente gefördert werden.«
I used to be somewhat of a casemodde in the early to mid 2000s. That's kind of the style of casemodding that I still like today. We used to shun people who buy ready parts or cases instead of building parts and modding cases themselves. I especially was an advocat of building things from materials that could be found on the street or in scrap containers or were otherwise free to aquire. Maybe just because i didn't have any money, didn't know many people who had enough money to simply buy materials and tools and didn't foresee a future where I was able to simply buy anything I needed to build something. To this day I like using leftovers, scrap and otherwise free materials to build things. I think I wasn't aware of that in the 2000s; but which case mods I like how much is to a large degree determined by how scrappy the building materials were and how simple the tools were. I wasn't usuially trying to build something that looks slick and exactly like planned, but something that looks unique and cool, and maybe extraordinary.
Here are a few examples of things that I did to cases of mine that I liked.
(I'll pick out photos of these examples at some point, maybe. I haven't yet.)
Coloured foil window
Making a whole in the left wall of a tower case is probably the most common case mod. There were various window kits to make it easy to get to a clean-looking result. I didn't care for those for a long time. Instead of bying any material to create a window in my case, I used what I had: a dremel-like tool with a cutting disk and some red polymere foil an old text book used to be covered with. If I remember correctly, my mother bought this book used one year for my new school year instead of getting the current version. The previous owner had a red protectie cover around it. Eventually one of the seams ripped and the cover slid off every day. So I left the cover off. It was translucent. A unique material, I thought. So I kkept it in case I wanted to build something with it some day. The case I used it for used to house a generic 286. I put a 586 in it, I think. In the early 2000s that was just an old, very slow computer, not a #RetroComputing statement. I glued the sheet to the steel case from the inside after removing the burr and abraded the edges with a used corner of some sand paper. With bright cold lights inside you could sort of look inside the case. But it was mainly for style. The rest of the case was covered in some tape that I found at some building site once. That way the cut edges didn't look too rough. It certainly was a unique look. I still like the style of that case.
Plastic hose IDE and floppy cables
Ribbon cables, such as they were used for IDE, floppy drives and SCSI, used to be impossible to tuck away nicely. Round cables, such as pretty much all cables that are connected externally, can be clipped almost anywere. Wide ribbon cables need to be folded to wire them cleanly. That doesn't even work well if the case and all parts are designed for it, which they never are. In most PCs those cables used to be just left hanging around, blocking airflow and view. Some PC manufacturers used to cut the ribbons into five or six parts and fixed them with a stacked position with cable ties. That looked much cleaner. And suddenly round IDE and floppy cables became a thing. The connectors were the same. But inbetween they weren't ribbon cables anymore because the individual wires were split up and shrouded in a plastic tube. Those cables were more flexible and usually more colourful than conventional IDE cables. Again, you could buy them. But until the day I got a set with a motherboard that I bought, I didn't want "factory made" round IDE and floppy cables. I made my own by splitting up ribbon cables and stuffing them through an old shower hose or a piece of a garden hose. Not as flexible, but just as practical as bought ones.
Aluminium tape wrap
I don't know where I got it. But I had enough wide aluminium tape to cover an entire mini tower on the sides and the top. To cover up the imperfect edges I used red electric tape. So almost the entire case was striped red and silver at an unusual. Simple, no cost for me in that case, and quickly giving a nice, retrofuturistic look to a before boring, grey mini tower.
IC exterior
Another idea that I once had was to use all the ICs (at least those that were at least 1 cm wide) from all those defective motherboards and extension cards that accumulated over the years. People would bring and I would pick up so much old PC hardware that others didn't need anymore. Often the reason was that at least some part had a hardware defect, in which case I usually gave up my hopes to get it working again. I had an entire wall covered in old motherboards at one point. Much of this stuff was from the mid-90s or older and therefore not worth keeping intact even if it was in a great condition when I got it. Eventually there were just too many unused and defective cards and other boards and I decided to recycle their ICs before I got rid of what I thought I'd never want to even look at again. I cut off all those ICs with a knife (only SMD chips), covered the right side of a big tower in double-sided adhesive tape and neatly placed one next to another. Sometimes I used chips smaller than a cm to fill gaps. Not even half of the side got covered. I tried to get more from other people who wanted to throw stuff away. But what I got didn't bring me close to covering even the one side. My idea was to cover all the sides. I realised I had to pay money to get enough even broken electronics to finish the case. That wasn't beside the idea. Also it didn't feel right to use just any old ICs. It was supposed to be a PC chip case. I never finished the case. Unfortunately I didn't have the idea to make the IC field transition into something else, like a solid colour, even just the gray the case was before. Or maybe I didn't want to dso that. Nowadays I have some ideas where I could possibly get trunkloads full of ICs that I assume aren't recyclable otherwise. Maybe I wouldn't use a big tower if I'd ever started this again.
Sofa PC
I had a sofa in my room. I don't remember where I got it. I probably picket it up from the street after somebody got rid of it. At the time I was thinking about andd experimenting with getting a PC very quiet, if not silent, without compromising on performance. This was a much more prevalent topic at the time, because CPUs used more and more power with every new model (peaking in the Pentium 4, which is famous for needing much more than 100 W at the clock speeds it was marketed for being able to run at). CPUs power consumption wasn't throttled in as many ways as they are today. Coltage was usually fix, so it needed to be as high as you needed it to be at peak performance moments. Clock usually couldn't be changed dynamically. The CPU couldn't switch parts of itself off when it didn't need them. And the power it consumed it needed for its single core; so there was no core to shut down, either, in idle moments. Other components usualy also used more power than they do today. Motherboards were built by more individual ICs, chipsets didn't idle well either, voltage regulation wasn't as efficient for performance CPUs, hard disks needed more power than even today's spinniung hard disks. Automatic, temperature-based fan control wasn't as advanced either when you wanted to regulate it for a chip's temeperature, and you had to place the sensor not only outside of the chip, but usually outside of the cooler. And I wanted to have a surver run 24/7. I was actually running a few services on the internet from my bedroom at the time, of which one was used and relied on at a daily basis. So, what I came up with was to build a PC into my Sofa. It had thick foam padding and a cotton filling, which made it sound proof at least to lover frequencies. I removed enough of the cotton to give it a large room with wich to interchange air. And it sort of worked. It got hotter in there than I hoped. But it was pretty quiet. Now that I'm thining of it again, I could've done some things to improve aitflow to the outside withou opening the sofa up too much to leak sound. There were no frequencies, apparently, at a multipe of the resonance frequencies of any of the wood panels of the sofa. Sitting on it wasn't affected in any way. And the whole thing was easily accessable from the front. There was a cut-put right above the floor with a handle, with which you coulde pull out a board, that slid out on small wheel. On the board all the components were mounted. I used parts from a relatively cheap ATX case to make the motherboard and drives mount easily. I never got it down to the temperature I set out to get. And I couldn't use high-rpm hard disks because then that was the only noise in the room and it was very annoying. But it worked, and the sliding mechanism was fancy, even though it was so simple to build. The cutout and handle were actually easy to overlook in the pattern of the fabric that the sofa already had. I got the ideaa for the sofa mod after I ran the server inside my wooden desk for a while. That is another story. The sofa mod was kind of the enhanced version of the desk PC.
I wonder why I don't make things like these anymore. Because making something in a unique style that you like feels extra good on top of the feeling of making something yourself.