It is simply not possible to carry on at the current level of economic activity without destroying the environment, says Guardian columnist George Monbiot
The mobile hardware market is even worse. For example, the way we use our phones hasn’t changed substantially in over a decade. Most people use a handful apps like email, calendar, media player, and so on. The functionality of these apps hasn’t really changed in any significant way, yet we keep getting faster hardware while software keeps getting more bloated.
This is a direct result of perverse incentives of capitalism. Hardware manufacturers want to keep selling more hardware and this creates little incentive to optimize software to be more efficient. Instead, software developers continue to create ever more bloated solutions that require less effort to produce and rely on faster hardware to compensate for the bloat.
Imagine if instead we aimed to keep the same hardware running for a decade, and focused on optimizing software to make the most of it.
think about how much processing goes into making fucking gui’s more “visually appealing” frosted edges and blurred transparency etc. completely fucking pointless, useless and chewing enormous resources every day (silicon, battery power etc etc).
we are being lead down a dangerous path of pointless indulgence
What’s worse is that all this cruft actually ends up making user experience worse as well. This is a great article discussing how input lag got worse over the years.
imo it’s not even that software becomes more complex, it’s that now 70 % of all programs are some unoptimized webview, bc developers test it on $2k computers and can’t be bothered to use a proper cross platform framework
as an example, my phone is almost 7 years old, and everything runs smoothly, bc most of it are either fully native apps, flutter or react native or some other framework that renders to native os ui, while even on newest computers electron programs run meh
like, i like shiny things and beautiful animations, just don’t make it run inside 150 abstractions 😤
All I want long term with a phone is software updates for security and app compatibility. That is in short supply in the current market. When I am next making a decision, I think the Librium with an Android compatibility layer might be best.
The mobile hardware market is even worse. For example, the way we use our phones hasn’t changed substantially in over a decade. Most people use a handful apps like email, calendar, media player, and so on. The functionality of these apps hasn’t really changed in any significant way, yet we keep getting faster hardware while software keeps getting more bloated.
This is a direct result of perverse incentives of capitalism. Hardware manufacturers want to keep selling more hardware and this creates little incentive to optimize software to be more efficient. Instead, software developers continue to create ever more bloated solutions that require less effort to produce and rely on faster hardware to compensate for the bloat.
Imagine if instead we aimed to keep the same hardware running for a decade, and focused on optimizing software to make the most of it.
deleted by creator
1000% this ^
think about how much processing goes into making fucking gui’s more “visually appealing” frosted edges and blurred transparency etc. completely fucking pointless, useless and chewing enormous resources every day (silicon, battery power etc etc).
we are being lead down a dangerous path of pointless indulgence
What’s worse is that all this cruft actually ends up making user experience worse as well. This is a great article discussing how input lag got worse over the years.
nice article. and a good point all those cycles pissed down the drain on pointless fluff. its just sad
indeed
imo it’s not even that software becomes more complex, it’s that now 70 % of all programs are some unoptimized webview, bc developers test it on $2k computers and can’t be bothered to use a proper cross platform framework
as an example, my phone is almost 7 years old, and everything runs smoothly, bc most of it are either fully native apps, flutter or react native or some other framework that renders to native os ui, while even on newest computers electron programs run meh
like, i like shiny things and beautiful animations, just don’t make it run inside 150 abstractions 😤
Yeah exactly, functionality isn’t really changing and things are getting more bloated.
All I want long term with a phone is software updates for security and app compatibility. That is in short supply in the current market. When I am next making a decision, I think the Librium with an Android compatibility layer might be best.