So, apparently, if you shout into the void of rural Texas, the void shouts back with... zero bars. đŸ“¶đŸ€” Our protagonist heroically battles tech woes by installing a roof antenna, achieving the groundbreaking result of... still no service. đŸ’ȘđŸš« Welcome to the thrilling saga of modern living, where noticing your phone's uselessness is a sport. đŸ†đŸ“±
https://ryanholiday.net/are-you-noticing-this/ #ruraltexas #techwoes #roofantenna #modernliving #phoneissues #HackerNews #ngated
Are You Noticing This? - RyanHoliday.net

Honestly, it’s been so bad for so long, I didn’t even notice.  When we moved out to rural Texas in 2015, there was basically no cell phone service at our house or on our dirt road. We tried to fix it at first—I even put a booster on the roof—but it didn’t work. I suppose we could have switched providers
but that seemed like a pain. We had a landline and wifi-calling, though both were unreliable, especially in storms or when one of our neighbors would cut the AT&T line while grading the road. So we got used to it. We accepted that when we were out and about at home, our phones couldn’t make calls or send texts
for over ten years. It was almost predictable, I’d be back somewhere on my property and some incredibly important call would come through
with just enough service for me to answer and not be able to talk. That’s why it sort of snuck up on me the last couple months that my phone had full reception when I was out checking on the cows. Or when I was walking the dog. Or even out in the garage.  An inconvenience that had been part of our lives for so long just suddenly went away.  And it took me some time to notice it. Which is something life does, by the way, it gets better and we don’t notice.  Because we’re so focused on what’s going wrong. Because we’re not paying attention. Because the algorithm and the news cycle is biased.  I thought the same thing as I was passing through the Austin airport this morning. For the last two years or so, security had been a mess because of a major construction project. As I landed at the American gates and walked to the exit, I noticed that finally the new security entrance was almost done. They were testing it right then.  The construction had been background noise for so long I had stopped perceiving that, slowly, progress was also happening. And that progress, eventually, inevitably, leads to a completion.  Having kids is like this too. You are so in the thick of it that you can be blind to the passing of time. Every haircut and nail trim means they’re getting a little older. Same too for every shirt they grow out of. There are obvious benchmarks like walking and potty training and first words but a lot of the other moments are more subtle. You don’t notice the moment you stop lugging a stroller everywhere. There is no one moment when an infant becomes a toddler or a toddler a teenager. These transitions don’t announce themselves. And you’re also so in the thick of it, dealing with so many problems, that you don’t always notice the ways they’re getting better, like as humans. You don’t notice the night that was the last night they woke you up at 3 a.m. You take for granted the day they started getting into the car themselves and buckling their own seatbelt. You don’t see the way they’re becoming more independent, more competent. It’s not obvious how the things you’re teaching are becoming values and habits, but if you’re doing it right, they are. And it’s easy to miss that everyday this person is becoming a better person, that you are succeeding at this really hard thing.  I guess what I am saying is that it’s important that we stop and see this. How often do we update our world view to account for what has been fixed, for what’s gotten better, for sources of annoyance that have been eliminated? Or are we carrying around zombie frustrations and anxieties and grievances that we can’t seem to shake?   Marcus Aurelius—who had every reason to see the world as dark and broken—had this remarkable capacity to notice beauty and progress everywhere. As he was dealing with wars and plagues and betrayals and the loss of loved ones, as his health was failing, he was also writing about the ordinary way that “baking bread splits in places and those cracks, while not intended in the baker’s art, catch our eye and serve to stir our appetite,” or the “charm and allure” of nature’s process, the “stalks of ripe grain bending low, the frowning brow of the lion, the foam dripping from the boar’s mouth.”  This is someone who cultivated what you might call a poet’s eye—the discipline to notice the beauty in the banal, the mundane, the everyday. He was able to see beauty anywhere
which is really important when you live in ugly times.  There’s a tendency, especially right now, to look at everything and see only what’s broken. And yes—there’s plenty that’s broken. But it’s worth remembering, stuff has always been broken. Ancient Greece had earthquakes and horrible storms and natural disasters. People suffered. People were killed. People stole the money intended to help those people. Ancient Rome had tyrants and bullies. It had pointless cruelty and systemic injustices.  It’s always been this way. For centuries, people have fought over minuscule differences. Their governments have been dysfunctional. Their traditions seemed like they were falling apart. Stuff was changing. Stuff was stressful. Stuff sucked.  It’s not only always been like this
but it’s almost always been worse. You can look out at the news and despair about things. Or you can zoom out and see progress. You can focus on the bad people and miss that the bad people today are almost certainly better than the bad people back then. Even the people you disagree with and dislike politically are not selling their enemies into slavery, sending children to work in the mines and doing science experiments on minorities–things that were not only common in Zeno and Marcus Aurelius’s time, but common enough where you live not that long ago!  For all the things it is easy to lament about the world, it’s disputable that we live in a time of abundance, medicine, knowledge, and opportunity—things our ancestors could not [...]

RyanHoliday.net

While I genuinely enjoy using Linux, I just cannot make a full switch to exclusively using that OS. One of the primary tools I utilize for both sermon prep and academic work is Logos Bible Software, which doesn’t have full functionality on Linux (no matter what work arounds I have tried). I wish Logos would offer a Linux version, but I don’t foresee that ever happening. And so I remain on a mainstream OS.

#techwoes #nerdy #bible

đŸ“±đŸ€Ł "I just want working RCS messaging" says someone stuck in the infinite loop of Apple and carrier finger-pointing, as if expecting these corporate behemoths to suddenly discover customer service magic. 🙄 Imagine thinking #AppleCare is anything more than a glorified, overpriced talk therapy session for your tech woes. 💾
https://wt.gd/i-just-want-my-rcs-messaging-to-work #RCSmessaging #customerservice #techwoes #corporatefailures #HackerNews #ngated
I just want working RCS messaging ‱ What's This Guy Doing?

I’m in over a month now with non-working RCS on my iPhone 15 Pro. Apple blames the carriers, the carriers tell me it’s not them (mostly T-Mobile since I have good contacts there). They tell me they can’t really do anything about iPhones not... | What's This Guy Doing? | Written stuff about things.

What's This Guy Doing? on Svbtle
just realized my laptop fan has two modes: “peaceful silence” and “jet engine about to take off because i opened chrome.” âœˆïžđŸ’» #laptoplife #techwoes
đŸŽ‰đŸŽ© Dive into Dennis Schubert's tale of woe, where he valiantly battles the EVIL đŸ‘č that is USB-C hubs, only to discover his trusty MacBook is just a glorified dongle holder. Spoiler: this isn't a review, just a cry for help from a man drowning in adapters. 🙃🔌
https://overengineer.dev/blog/2021/04/25/usb-c-hub-madness/ #USBCHubStruggles #MacBookAdventures #AdapterLife #TechWoes #CryForHelp #HackerNews #ngated
USB-C hubs and my slow descent into madness - Dennis Schubert

A short story of me trying out different USB-C hubs, taking them apart, and slowly descending into madness.

Printers, grrrr. Printed off my Samurai Su Doku, my codeword, and the simple su doku. Turned the paper round to print the other sudoku (my regular weekend puzzles, these!), and the printer insisted it was offline! So I've had to turn it off, wait, turn it back on, and laboriously enter the wifi code. #printers #TechWoes
Ah, yes, the groundbreaking revelation that Amazon's AI has the stability of a Jenga tower in an earthquake đŸ€Ż. Who would've thought that the tech behemoth's digital assistant could fumble the ball on being the conversational MVP? 🏆 Just what we needed, another long-winded dissection of corporate tech woes—yawn.🙄
https://surfingcomplexity.blog/2025/06/08/ai-at-amazon-a-case-study-of-brittleness/ #AmazonAI #JengaTech #ConversationalMVP #TechWoes #CorporateDissection #HackerNews #ngated
AI at Amazon: a case study of brittleness

A year ago, Mihail Eric wrote a blog post detailing his experiences working on AI inside Amazon: How Alexa Dropped the Ball on Being the Top Conversational System on the Planet. It’s a great 


Surfing Complexity
iOS 18 Photos had a promising redesign with cool collections. Yet, the broken Trips feature and persistent indexing problems are frustrating. Seriously hoping iOS 19 sorts out these Photo app issues. #iOSPhotos #AppleUpdate #TechWoes
🧼🔀 Ah, the eternal struggle of #MathML with Pandoc—a riveting tale of tech woe where every tool fails to impress, forcing our hero to manually type MathML like it's 1999. 😂 Pro tip: just blame the converters and hope no one notices.
https://leancrew.com/all-this/2025/05/mathml-with-pandoc/ #Pandoc #TechWoes #ManualTyping #ConverterStruggles #1999Vibes #HackerNews #ngated
MathML with Pandoc

đŸ“šđŸ€Ż Oh no, the "Knowledge-Work Supply-Chain Crisis" is upon us! Quick, panic! Or just blame AI for being too efficient and humans for being...well, human. 'Works on my machine' - the ultimate tech woe! đŸš€đŸ› ïž
https://worksonmymachine.substack.com/p/the-coming-knowledge-work-supply #KnowledgeWorkSupplyChain #Crisis #AIEfficiency #HumanErrors #TechWoes #HackerNews #ngated
The Coming Knowledge-Work Supply-Chain Crisis

"Humans. Here they are. Bottleneck, bottleneck. Hi, good to see you. And some of you are terrified. You're going to be even bigger bottlenecks." - Tyler Cowen

Works on My Machine