Right now a lot of us are trying to divest and diversify from having our entire lives on Google both because of the way Google spends its money and the long-standing privacy concerns seeming a bit more scary now.

What services have you switched to and what has your experience been? What do you like, what don’t you like, would you recommend them?

  • AlexWarburton@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Google Search -> Ecosia, Qwant Browser -> Vivaldi Mail, Calender -> Proton* Drive -> Proton* DNS -> Quad9 Notes -> Joplin VPN -> Proton LLM/AI -> Mistral Translate -> DeepL Maps -> Here We Go Dall-E etc -> Stability Matrix Kindle -> Pocketbook

    *Planning to move everything to a NAS with Nextcloud and synch in with Jottacloud as a backup.

    • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      14 hours ago

      I see from the “View source” option that your comment has everything in a neat, line-by-line fashion, though the final markup is decidedly not.

      So, a pro-tip I’ve noticed from my own commenting experience: even if you have a line break, Lemmy (for some stupid reason) won’t apply one when rendering; so if you want it to show, you have to use two line breaks, though then there will be an extra half-line or so that you probably never wanted.

      For example, don’t do

      Line Item 1
      Line Item 2
      

      but rather do

      Line Item 1
      
      Line Item 2
      

      Yes, I agree it’s rather stupid.

      • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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        14 hours ago

        It’s the way Markdown works, for reasons, which is what Lemmy uses for its comment syntax.

        If you want a regular line
        break, you can put two spaces
        at the end of a line.

          • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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            12 hours ago

            Yeah, it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense here. Codeberg uses a Markdown flavor which honors single line breaks and it kind of surprised me how well that is working. Like, if you’re used to Markdown, you can put those two spaces and they’re just ignored. If you’re not used to Markdown, it works like you’d expect.

            I guess, the downside is that either each client needs to configure their Markdown renderer to behave like that, or I guess, the server software has to pre-process the Markdown to add in the double-spaces.
            That’s more of a problem for Lemmy than it is for Codeberg, because there is a number of different clients available.

            • toastal@lemmy.ml
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              8 hours ago

              Jerboa vs. the website do different things since they render Markdown differently. Markdown itself is so spartan that it doesn’t have many things users want or need, so a bunch of incompatible forks get made & everyone just pretends it is all the same when in reality, it often lies on a single tool’s implementation.

              Take AsciiDoc with its verse directive or reStructuredText with its line-block directive. Both get you poetry-style newlines on demand & are a part of the spec instead of left to the implementer.

              • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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                7 hours ago

                Yeah, that’s kind of the advantage and disadvantage of Markdown. It’s so simple that alternative implementations can be easily created, which helps with adoption. But because those alternative implementations exist and because there is a need to add more features, those alternative implementations will see custom changes for the format, ultimately making the format less standardized.

                • toastal@lemmy.ml
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                  53 minutes ago

                  I find this pretty bad since everything seems to be compatible until it is too late & it is already adopted. I would like to see more uptake of the alternatives.