Seb 🇩🇪

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Seb 🇩🇪

Seb 🇩🇪

@seb__tech

Tech/Aviation/Modding | other: @CROXYPlayz | Deutsch/English | Phone Collector and Modder | PC/Cybersec Enthusiast | Fedora Forever | On the search for a Note 7

Deutschland Katılım Mart 2022
120 Takip Edilen55 Takipçiler
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
Thinkpadmaxxing
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PathOfLegacy
PathOfLegacy@PathOf_Legacy·
Men, be honest, is this enough?
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Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@damideytalk No vapourchamber until the 17 Pro's introduced it. The SoC produces heat that has nowhere to go.
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Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@_fawazoladejo Thanks haha, I'm trying to improve each time and sharing is good for feedback.
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TechDaveYoutube
TechDaveYoutube@drbradley46·
Family time today is: @LenovoThinkPad T14 gen 3 Ideapad/chromebook X13 gen 1 All streaming out pcs via @ParsecTeam to kitchen table with the help of @EE wifi extender (wifi 7 up to 1gbps wifi)
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@nikewrayy @tgod34748 2016's non TB models did have removable storage though with a carrier that accepts 2230 drives. Its a great machine for Linux, the CPU especiall has a good iGPU and is efficient when undervolted.
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🍃
🍃@nikewrayy·
@tgod34748 2016 and 2017 both have problem with the display, and it's called the 'spotlights effect.'
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Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@drbradley46 For your usecases Linux just makes a ton more sense since nothing you need only works on windows. Youll have less telemetry, more batterylife and a smoother experience alongside more support and software features like wine. My recommendation is Fedora (Workstation or XFCE)
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TechDaveYoutube
TechDaveYoutube@drbradley46·
Stay on 10pro? Move to bypass install of 11pro? Or a delicious flavour of linux? I want to use laptop exclusively for writing ✍️ reading 📚 & audiobook creation/narration/podcasts
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@iconredesign @saraaa7447 T2 is more of a downside really but its a background part anyways, just makes booting other OS's a hassle at times. Atleast the intel Macs support Linux natively unlike modern apple silicon Also for the people that will dont tell me about Asahi, it is not as native and only M1/M2
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icon (5-core GPU)
icon (5-core GPU)@iconredesign·
@saraaa7447 They can FOH, the final Intel MacBook Pro is slept on, 100Wh battery, big speakers, a good keyboard, T2 chip, but also Intel compatibility, and the Touch Bar
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saraaaaaaa 💽
saraaaaaaa 💽@saraaa7447·
apparently tech twitter will call you every insult available for daring to step out of line and say intel macbooks are good 🙃
saraaaaaaa 💽@saraaa7447

@heyitskamil_ 8-core i9, 32 GB RAM, 2 TB of storage and a 16" screen for sub-600 is very worth it imo

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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@ggwhiting @drbradley46 Its still windows 11 at the endo of the day. Navigation sucks, the look is junk and its not as safe and straightforward as Win10 LTSC which is very debloated from the get go and official.
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G@ggwhiting·
@seb__tech @drbradley46 Have you tried Nano11 or Tiny11 mate as they are less resource hungry.
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TechDaveYoutube
TechDaveYoutube@drbradley46·
HELP! My delightful x270 (i5 7300u/8gb ddr4 2133mhz/240gb sata ssd/1080p upgraded/win10pro extended updates) is in need of a new OS! Needs be pretty, and optimised for writing ✍️... Shud I force upgrade to win11pro? Or a flavour of linux...?
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@furryhagumi If its the 2016 one then its acctually the last MacBook with removeable storage bing the non touchbar one. With Linux it still can be a nice computer especially powerefficient.
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@WorkaholicDavid A5 2017 for now The secondary to my S25 is the smaller A3 2017 and its perfect for what I need it for, sometimes being used as my primary If i ever get my hands on a Note7 that'll most likely be my #1, USB-C, OLED, Homebutton, edge display, microSD slot, 3.5mm Literally perfect
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Amir
Amir@WorkaholicDavid·
What was your favorite phone?
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
Reflex literally has me forced on Nvidia. If you tasted it once, you really cannot go back. I really need a Radeon or preferably a Intel equivalent that works on Linux because Nvidia drivers on Linux is not something I want to bother with having done it multiple times.
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Asher
Asher@asherdipps·
It’s 2026… who is the best tech CEO?
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Piyush
Piyush@piyush784066·
What’s the one Windows software that is still keeping you from switching to Linux 100%?
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@Shakegmaes @saraaa7447 @heyitskamil_ No replaceable Storage though and Asahi is kind of the only option, not that i dont like it as i personally daily fedora but still its not the "full" support.
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Seb 🇩🇪
Seb 🇩🇪@seb__tech·
@FrameworkPuter No one forces them to use 30 screw bit types on anything. Philips head is plenty reasonable. And dont get me started on parts pairing or iCloud lock, those 2 produced millions of tons of ewaste just to get more money in the greedy execs pockets.
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Framework
Framework@FrameworkPuter·
What a load of 💩
Big Brain Business@BigBrainBizness

John Ternus, Apple's SVP of Hardware Engineering, explains why Apple deliberately made the iPhone harder to repair, and why the math says it was worth it: In a conversation with MKBHD, John frames the design challenge by asking you to imagine two extremes: "Sometimes for me I find it helpful to kind of think about the book ends. Like if you imagine a product that never fails, right? That just doesn't fail. And on the other end, a product that maybe isn't very reliable but is super easy to repair." His position is clear: "Product that never fails is obviously better for the customer. It's better for the environment." When pushed on whether infinite repairability and infinite durability have to be mutually exclusive, John acknowledges they aren't always, but explains why the tension is real, using the iPhone battery as an example. Batteries wear out. If you want to extend the life of the product, they need to be replaced. But in the early days of iPhone, one of the most common failures wasn't the battery, it was water: "Where you drop it in the pool or you, you know, spill your drink on it and the unit fails. And so, we've been making strides over all those years to get better and better and better in terms of minimizing those failures." That work led Apple to an IP68 rating, the point where customers fish their phones out of lakes after two weeks and find them still working. But there was a cost to achieving that level of durability: "To get the product there, you've got to design a lot of seals, adhesives, other things to make it perform that way, which makes it a little harder to do that battery repair." That's the deliberate tradeoff. Apple chose tighter seals and stronger adhesives, knowing it would make battery replacement more difficult, because the reliability gains were worth it. John argues the math backs this decision: "It's objectively better for the customer to have that reliability and it's ultimately better for the planet because the failure rates since we got to that point have just dropped. It's plummeted, right? The number of repairs that need to happen and every time you're doing a repair, you're bringing in new materials to replace whatever broke." His conclusion reframes the entire repairability debate: "You can actually do the math and figure out there's a threshold at which if I can make it this durable, then it's better to have it a little bit harder to repair because it's going to net out."

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