Nice! The New Economics Foundation’s crowdfunder to kickstart a cooperatively-owned cab firm in London got fully funded. http://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/faircab/
Kind: Notes
I was really pleased when Mozilla acquired Pocket, but it doesn’t look like it’s going to be heading fully free or libre anytime soon, if the latest feature rollout is anything to go by:
“Highlighting in Pocket has two tiers: Free and Premium. All Pocket users will be able to create 3 highlights per article, and those who subscribe to Pocket Premium will be able to create an unlimited number of highlights.”
I’m guessing (hoping) though that given the Mozilla association at the very least they’ll take personal data security and privacy seriously.
Don’t know if it’s really the remit of any social media platform, but Mastodon USP could be if it also worked as a catalyst of some of the stronger social bonds beyond online. “Social media promises an end to loneliness but actually produces an increase in solitude and an intense awareness of social exclusion. Texting and other technologies give you more control over your social interactions but also lead to thinner interactions and less real engagement with the world.” https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/20/opinion/how-evil-is-tech.html
In fact a few times now I’ve heard people say the feature they miss (or would miss) the most from Facebook is the very well targeted suggestions of local events.
Jesus. Eclipse is as slow as it ever was.
A couple of book recommendations from Dr Malham: 23 Things They Don’t Tell You About Capitalism and Economics: The User’s Guide, both by Ha-Joon Chang.
It’s a bit irritating when spares websites just sell the entire, brand new product. Not really what I’m looking for when I go to a spare parts website…
Upstream, makers of great podcasts on alternative economies, need some new gear to make the podcast. Help them out if you can spare something: https://www.generosity.com/education-fundraising/upstream-needs-new-equipment-urgently
The pro-capitalism argument of ‘look at these things that it has achieved’ is based on the assumption that these things couldn’t have been achieved under any other system.
I used snap for the first time today, while setting up a demo nextcloud server. All dependencies in one bundle, it was incredibly simple. Has anyone else used it, is there a catch? (aside from the wasted disk space from not sharing dependencies) Pros/cons?
We did a radio show discussing the thoughts raised by our visit to The Glassroom and the idea of a data detox.
https://soundcloud.com/restart-project-1/restart-radio-5-december-2017
