The heading isn't very clear or focused and I'm probably not explaining this very well.
The post is a bit of a whinge - prompted by a growing sense that cloud computing has been a Trojan horse (one that ended privacy/put control of personal computers and their contents in the hands of the big guys) and that with AI and ever more manipulative behaviours on the part of the suppliers of the wherewithals for a personal computing set up (with Linux seemingly an exception) that it's becoming almost impossible to find a way through the maze.
That it's become incredibly difficult to configure a system that just works properly without ongoing hassle, being subject to external manipulation and without exposure to security, privacy, financial and a variety of other risks.
Having been strong armed once too often by Microsoft I made the decision in principle to end my use of Windows and an Office 365 account and go to Linux last year. Following a few recent hardware failures on a fairly old Win 10 laptop I started work on making it happen on a new desktop PC only in the past month or so. I for similar reasons want to move to a Google/Android free phone but haven't really got started on this.
It hasn't been going very well. I'm left with many questions including the following:
It'd be great to hear from those wiuth an informed big picture view on these and related matters - does personal computing actually have a future??
The post is a bit of a whinge - prompted by a growing sense that cloud computing has been a Trojan horse (one that ended privacy/put control of personal computers and their contents in the hands of the big guys) and that with AI and ever more manipulative behaviours on the part of the suppliers of the wherewithals for a personal computing set up (with Linux seemingly an exception) that it's becoming almost impossible to find a way through the maze.
That it's become incredibly difficult to configure a system that just works properly without ongoing hassle, being subject to external manipulation and without exposure to security, privacy, financial and a variety of other risks.
Having been strong armed once too often by Microsoft I made the decision in principle to end my use of Windows and an Office 365 account and go to Linux last year. Following a few recent hardware failures on a fairly old Win 10 laptop I started work on making it happen on a new desktop PC only in the past month or so. I for similar reasons want to move to a Google/Android free phone but haven't really got started on this.
It hasn't been going very well. I'm left with many questions including the following:
- Where in heaven does a person go to buy hassle free and at reasonable price a reliable upper mid range Ubuntu Cinnamon compatible desktop in the UK or Europe these days? (many hours of work over two weeks in an attempt to research, resolve technical questions relating to, specify and buy a Lenovo desktop were recently wasted - my experience has been that their sales support is abysmal)
- Does there exist a way to access a search engine that actually responds to the entered serch terms - instead of throwing up a repeating page of the highest bidders?
- Does there exist a browser that is reliable, secure and that works across all commercial websites that is not going to harvest my data, not bury me in attempts to force use of AI and other functions and/or services that I don't want?
- Does there exist a phone option which without requiring a Google account/Android and burying the user in more unwanted stuff will as well as making calls and browsing the web also take pics, run basic apps and where necessary (e.g. email, pics etc) synchronise these with the PC?
- Linux Ubuntu Cinnamon (and other distros) seem to provide an integrity driven means to avoid many of the further problems which arise in running Windows and other Microsoft apps which is great. Are they however going to be find themselves as a consequence of incompatabilities and more to the point intentional blocking by many websites and apps squeezed into a smaller and smaller corner - one where for example larger commercial and other websites running enterprise systems which already override default browser apps and the like will simply become inaccessible or subject to more and more compatibility issues?
It'd be great to hear from those wiuth an informed big picture view on these and related matters - does personal computing actually have a future??
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