Tech
Seeking IT independence, Europe wants to escape Microsoft Office. The question is: where to?
Where do we go when the internet dies?
A look at why small, personal websites don’t need big-tech static hosting, and how a simple local build and rsync workflow gives you faster deploys, more control, and far fewer dependencies.
"One of the big appeals of interactive TV was adoption, the average household had a TV long before the average household had a computer. So, it seems like interactive TV services should have proliferated before personal computers, at least following the logic that many in the industry did at the time."
How self-tracking became self-incrimination
We help you find European alternatives for digital service and products, like cloud services and SaaS products.
We can just say “no thanks” to technology if it doesn’t make sense. New is not inevitable. New doesn’t mean need.
If you used a Mac computer in the '80s or '90s, you likely remember what's now called Classic Mac OS, the precursor to the OS called macOS today. You might think you would need to find an ancient Mac on Craigslist to use that operating system again, but that's not true: you can try them all in your browser right now.
(Sí. Es 2024. Y me he instalado Adium en el ordenador.)
John Voorhees writing about Arc’s latest escapades in MacStories Weekly: Issue 408
It’s that intermediate layer that makes me suspicious of Arc’s motives. The company is starting to feel like a wolf in sheep’s clothing, a browser with an interesting, playful design on the surface and
Microsoft's involvement in IBM's OS/2 project ended before v2.0 was released.
Some iconic scrollbars recreated as faithfully as possible.
Seguramente hayáis visto que Internet cada vez es más insufrible. Y cada vez es más complicado que no nos rastreen mientras navegamos. Y,...