Article réservé aux abonnés
Shamot
Je n'aime pas le point médian parce que je ne sais pas comment le prononcer. De plus, je mets beaucoup plus de temps à lire un texte avec des points médians (ou normaux ou tirets ou autre), un peu comme quand je lis un texte avec pleins de faire d'orthographe. Quand je reçois un long mail plein de points médians, je demande à ChatGPT de le convertir en quelque-chose de plus lisible.
Ce que je fais quand j'écris, c'est que j'essaie d'utiliser des mots neutres comme personne, mais peut-être qu'un jour, on nous dira que c'est un mot féminin et qu'il faut parler de person·ne·s ou de personnes et persons.
This functionality can be local. I use the Google keyboard with internet access blocked and it works. The only thing missing is the ability to search for emojis typing a word (they are still in the list) and some features that I never used and never understood why they are in a keyboard since it's not related to typing text, like the gifs.
The only reason I see for a keyboard to need internet connection is to update the dictionary when it's modified, but it shouldn't prevent to work with an outdated dictionary.
When I searched for alternatives a few months ago, I couldn't find anything satisfying.
I don't like Ubuntu because of their forcing method to use Snap package manager.
I don't like Manjaro because of its poor dependency management. Many dependencies are not declared, so that if you update a package, it won't update the undeclared dependency and it won't work any longer. You have to update everything or nothing, and when disk space becomes low, updating everything at once is impossible.
I can confirm what the study says. I have different usernames for each community I'm involved in and take care of the reputation of each of them separately.
With an ephemeral name, nothing matters and we can shitpost without restraints.
With my real name, I wouldn't participate at all in many communities.