@Athena@chaosfem.tw I do see those extremes, but I also see a lot of stuff in the middle, so I donβt think those are the only choices.
Like, my kids never have to tinker with Ubuntu. Firefox starts up with no issues 99% of the time. LibreOffice Just Works for school work. But you can still open the hood and tinker if thatβs your bag. Lots of things are actually like this! And thatβs amazing!
@Athena@chaosfem.tw I think where people get caught up a bit is one of two places:
(1) picking something that requires tinkering (intentionally or not), and getting frustrated at how much that involves
(2) choosing to tinker with something and finding out that can of worms is much bigger than you expected
Like my father in law decided his first Linux should be Arch, which even for an IT person was a bit More than what he expected!
@calcifer@masto.hackers.town youβre right that thereβs more in the middle than I implied but there are still a lot of areas where the foss options are βrequires tinkeringβ and βthis space intentionally left blankβ. I love that we have a few high quality options like blender, libreoffice, etc. but there are as many or more areas of endeavor thatβs not true - freecad is great for what it is but even the free versions of commercial software blow it out of the water without any effort on stability and usability, I like darktable for photo processing but itβs crashy, has a high learning curve, and is missing a lot of nice tools compared to the adobe option, foss video editorsβ¦ exist, technically, etc etc
idk. The older I get the more convinced I am that stallman was right when he said "With software there are only two possibilities: either the users control the program or the program controls the users. If the program controls the users, and the developer controls the program, then the program is an instrument of unjust power.β
we as developers (mostly addressing myself here) need to do better for the people around us. too much have we been complicit or actively involved in exploiting that unjust power