jameshjacksonjr
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jameshjacks0njr.twit.social.ap.brid.gy
jameshjacksonjr
@jameshjacks0njr.twit.social.ap.brid.gy
I use Linux PCs have a Light Phone 3. I am into #retrotech #bicycling #photography #reading and #linux

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://twit.social/@jameshjacks0njr, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
@cybette communicator next to the Blackberry Classic.
January 11, 2026 at 4:28 AM
@andrewmelder are you getting a #clickscommunicator ?
January 4, 2026 at 11:46 PM
Reposted by jameshjacksonjr
If the Clicks Communicator flops, I don't EVER want to hear ANYBODY say "I would buy a modern BlackBerry!" again.
January 2, 2026 at 4:50 PM
https://linuxblog.io/thinkpad-laptops-linux-guide/ a good long form article for Linux fans. Or those new to Linux looking for a good laptop to install Linux distros on.
linuxblog.io
December 31, 2025 at 8:05 PM
December 31, 2025 at 12:22 AM
Reposted by jameshjacksonjr
New in the #Übersicht widget gallery: https://tracesof.net/uebersicht-widgets/

My #icalbuddy widget that puts your #macos calendars in a two-column display on your desktop. Also available direct from my @Codeberg repo […]

[Original post on mastodon.phoenixtrap.com]
December 30, 2025 at 1:00 AM
December 22, 2025 at 4:11 PM
@cybette
December 19, 2025 at 11:35 PM
@cybette https://shop.puri.sm/shop/liberty-phone/ see what i mean thats a lot.
Liberty Phone – Purism
shop.puri.sm
December 11, 2025 at 3:10 PM
Reposted by jameshjacksonjr
#thinkpad

So I had to recycle the ThinkPad today. Unfortunately the new battery did not work meaning the repair is beyond my skill level. Probably something on the board or something like that.

So gonna work on my vanlife and look at saving for a laptop upgrade.

Maybe get me a System76 or […]
Original post on social.mechanizedarmadillo.com
social.mechanizedarmadillo.com
December 6, 2025 at 7:14 PM
Reposted by jameshjacksonjr
It looks like my local repair cafe is going to help switch people to linux mint.

#repaircafe #linux #linuxmint #byewindows10
November 28, 2025 at 4:22 PM
@mntmn i got my crowd supply order in for my hyper reform next raw. Im so excited glad to see people making a laptop the way they were meant to be made, with out having to wonder whats going on sneakily behind the scenes. Thanks for making such quality hardware […]

[Original post on twit.social]
December 6, 2025 at 8:38 PM
@purism when will their be a new Librem Laptop as i want to buy 1
December 4, 2025 at 7:20 PM
In an era of rising prices, computers have gotten cheaper. (And why that may end)
Computing has been one of the few areas where prices have decreased over time while many other things have seen large increases. Technological advances have underpinned a consistent drop in the cost of computing, but experts say that this may be reaching the end of the road. (Getty Images | Emily Bogle/NPR) _NPR's series_ _Cost of Living: The Price We Pay_ _is examining what's driving price increases and how people are coping after years of stubborn inflation. How are higher prices changing the way you live? Fill out_ _this form_ _to share your story with NPR._ ### What's the item? MacBook Pro laptop ### How has the price changed since before the pandemic? It has dropped $200. Today's entry-level MacBook Pro starts at $1,599. It has a 14-inch screen, 16 gigabytes of memory and a 512-gigabyte internal solid-state hard drive. The comparable MacBook Pro from five years ago, with the same memory and storage (but only a 13-inch screen), cost $1,799. ### Why has the price fallen? Pricing is an art form, and price tags can depend on a wide range of factors beyond the cost of labor and materials — market positioning, competition, company culture, consumer psychology and so forth. Apple and others often maintain steady price points for key products as a strategic choice. (Fun fact: Apple also tends to set prices that end with the number 9 — $999 for a MacBook Air, $6,999 for a Mac Pro, $549 for AirPods Max, etc.) But there's a technical reason for why over time computers as a whole have become cheaper: It's called Moore's law. ### Intel co-founder and philanthropist Gordon Moore has died at 94 Moore also made his famous observation, now known as Moore's Law, three years before he helped start Intel in 1968. It said the capacity and complexity of integrated circuits would double every year. ### The U.S. government is taking a stake in Intel. It's rare — and it has some risks In the past, the federal government has taken stakes in American companies during wars or economic crises. But now the government's motivation has more to do with the race for AI chips and technology. Gordon Moore, a chip expert and co-founder of Intel, postulated that the number of transistors on microchips would double every 24 months or so thanks to advances in miniaturization technology. Transistors are the little switches that make digital processing happen. They control the flow of electricity — the ones and zeros of computing. As transistors have shrunk, the price per transistor — and thus the price of computing — has plummeted. Being able to reliably double how many of them could fit onto a chip allowed computers to become smaller and more powerful without driving up their cost. It has given us computing power that would have been inaccessible or even unimaginable in the past. It's the main reason that there are mass-market smartwatches today that have more power than the computers on the Apollo 11 lunar mission. And it's why computers, which were once behemoths so expensive that only businesses and universities could afford them, are now small enough to fit onto a desktop or into your pocket. At the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif., docent Scott Stauter demonstrates an IBM 1401, a mainframe computer from the early 1960s. It fills a room the size of a classroom, and it runs on punch cards and reel-to-reel tapes. It once cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. And it had only the equivalent of 16 kilobytes of memory. "At home, my laptop has 16 gigabytes of memory. That's 16 billion bytes," says Stauter. "That's a million times more than the maximum that a 1401 could have." Computer buyers can now get more bang for fewer bucks even over the span of a few years, as the MacBook Pro shows. And because chips are now in everything, that means other kinds of electronics have also become cheaper over time. Take 55-inch OLED flat-screen TVs, for example. The first one hit the market in 2013 for over $10,000. Today, you can pick one up for under $1,000. Smartphones are another example. Samsung's newest model in 2020 started at $999.99. This year, the newest version was $799. Moore, who died in 2023, knew his law had as much to do with economics as it did with physics. "I was just trying to get across the idea that integrated circuits were going to be the route to cheap electronics, something that was not clear at the time," Moore said in a 2008 oral history interview in the Computer History Museum's archives. ### What are people doing about it? They got used to it. "Miniaturization was something that happened very regularly, and people could kind of count on it," says Neil Thompson, an innovation scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab and the university's Initiative on the Digital Economy. ### Microsoft turns 50: A look back at everything from the Altair to the Zune The company helped launch the software industry and bring a computer to every desktop. Hit products like Windows and the Xbox became household names – but does anyone remember the Zune? ### As political winds shift, top chipmaker TSMC looks beyond Taiwan The lifeblood of Silicon Valley — advanced microchips — pumps from a science park on Taiwan's west coast, mostly from TSMC, the world's biggest chipmaker. But now the company is looking abroad for places to grow. Moore's law enabled generations to believe that computers would always become better — and to buy more of them. People may now own several computers — in the form of laptops, tablets or smartwatches — as well as other devices with computers embedded within them, everything from cars to refrigerators. But Moore's law may be hitting its limit. Transistors are getting so small — tens of billions can fit on a chip now — that experts say the laws of physics are slowing the reliable pace of progress. "During the heyday of Moore's law, miniaturization gave us chips with more transistors, and it also meant that each transistor used less power," Thompson says. "Today, miniaturization is giving us much smaller reductions in power, and so trying to cram in too many transistors produces a lot of heat and can melt a chip." He says that the predictability that Moore's law provided will wane in the coming decade and that it will take other technological breakthroughs to create new gains in efficiency and drops in price. One example is software. Thompson says the steady march of progress underpinned by Moore's law meant that computer system designers could get away with code that was sometimes inefficient. He says there are significant computing gains to be mined by improving software. Chip designers and manufacturers say chip packaging is another way to squeeze more out of the technology. Packaging refers to the ways in which individual chips are hooked up to others to form powerful sets. _Apple is a financial supporter of NPR._
www.houstonpublicmedia.org
December 4, 2025 at 3:10 PM
If anyone is looking for a good company selling linux computers and accessories i highly recommend #thinkpenguin https://www.thinkpenguin.com a company i bought all my linux laptops from. Highly recommend by me.
ThinkPenguin.com | Penguin Laptops, Desktops, and Accessories with Linux & GNU Support
www.thinkpenguin.com
November 30, 2025 at 7:54 PM
Reposted by jameshjacksonjr
Today I am stepping down from my role as the CEO of #mastodon. Though this has been in the works for a while, I can't say I've fully processed how I feel about it. There is a bittersweet part to it, and I think I will miss it, but it also felt necessary. It feels like a goodbye, but it isn't—I […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
November 18, 2025 at 8:46 AM