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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: January 15th, 2026

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  • One of several open source projects they’re helping fund happens to be run by a person like that. They’re funding is because of the open source project, but some people are very vocal that they’d rather the project not exist at all, and post about it every chance they get.

    It’s like how some vegans can’t help but tell you loudly and at every opportunity that they’re vegan. Or some of the more insufferable Linux users in general. Venn diagram is probably a near circle with that linux group actually.

    FOSS is a pretty small community in the grand scheme, if you avoided any project run by an objectionable individual, you couldn’t run much of anything.

    There’s been plenty of posts about this particular issue all over if you go looking for it. I’d recommend doing your own research on whether you have a problem with it, and not rely on just a couple random commenters here, myself included.


  • Yeah, they’re not the cheapest but that’s because of their goals.

    Designing with reparability and upgradeability in mind means more bespoke parts which cost more versus existing component assemblies in the market. That means more costly tooling and development, with smaller production runs than say a company like HP or Dell (which also costs more).

    They actually sell the components and parts at reasonable pricing, and more importantly… designed with end user repairs in mind. So instead of everything being soldered to the main oard, different components are on separate subboards that can be replaced or upgraded separately. And include easy repair guides, a screwdriver in the box, and even extra screws pre installed in the chassis when you inevitably lose one.

    Where possible, newer hardware they release can still be used on older models. Sometimes working 100%, sometimes with some limited capability depending on older system limitations. For instance, they just updated the 16" model and added an RTX 5070 GPU option, which you can purchase separately and pop into your old Framework 16 without needing to get a whole new system. Likewise, the same with the new mainboard/CPU in your old chassis. Or the new Laptop 13 2.8K Touchscreen which can be installed in every previous Laptop 13 model other than the Chromebook.

    Very few laptop manufacturers get close to that kind of repairability and upgradeability, and that does come with a cost.


  • All of my self-hosted systems are on a TrueNAS system and using the built-in app system (basically docker). It notifies me when they’re needing updates, and has a single click update process for everything. I just login weekly to see if the button is yellow, then check on it like 15 minutes later to see if anything failed to update. Yeah they’re all on the same hardware, which is probably bad, but nothing there is strictly necessary, it’s all just media stuff and for fun.

    The one service that is separate is Pangolin on a DigitalOcean droplet. I just handle that manually when it says there’s an update. Still effectively just docker, but no easy button.

    I could automate these more, but I would spend more time setting it up than I would save since it only takes me a couple minutes maybe once a week.




  • I remember reading an article a few years back about I think it was the Tomb Raider devs that tried removing the yellow paint and just using more natural indicators that fit into the environment more seamlessly.

    The user experience testing showed almost no one was able to figure out where to go, what they could do, or interact with, etc. to the point where the testers were getting frustrated and actively complaining about the lack of direction and indicators.

    The best solution though, is just make it a setting. Just make those textures a toggle setting to turn on and off, but leave it on by default for general usability. For those that care, they can disable them.