The first week with a Jolla phone and Sailfish OS

I’ve had my Jolla phone for a little over a week now and I’ve completely switched off my Android phone. Time to see how well things are going! Some native applications I had to grab from alternative sources: Mitäkuuluu, the WhatsApp client. I got this from OpenRepos.net, a repository of Sailfish and Meego Harmattan apps. Harbour Tethering GUI. I got this straight from GitHub. I had to install both on the terminal using rpm: devel-su rpm -i package.rpm. You can execute this either on the built-in terminal application or by SSHing into your phone. The SSH server is built right into Sailfish, by the way, all you need to do to get it is to enable developer mode in phone settings. It even helpfully tells you its own IP. ...

January 3, 2014 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself, part 7: Deleting your account

So you’ve found replacements for all the things you used to get from Google, and you’re ready to delete your account. Nice! Good job. I just did the same thing yesterday: Make sure to tick every single box, otherwise they won’t let you go. Also, be sure to download any YouTube clips you may have uploaded. I had a YouTube clip with over half a million views and 3000 thumbs up, so that hurt a little bit. But it’s all good, I will be hosting that clip here in the future. ...

November 13, 2013 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself, part 6: Browsers and syncing

There is something that is so basic and common to using the Internet that I perhaps overlooked it in my earlier articles: the web browser. Google Chrome has been gaining market share at an alarming rate over the last few years. Whatever Google’s marketing is doing, it’s working, as even people who don’t know how to install a program have installed Google Chrome and are using it as their default browser. Yes, this is anecdotal evidence, but I know several people who aren’t really good around technology, who were using Internet Explorer before (!) and are now Chrome users. With no help from anyone. ...

November 10, 2013 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself, part 5: Translation, dictionaries and online video

After all my other posts and about a year of activity on the subject of ungoogling yourself, I have come to the point where I only depend on Google for two things: YouTube videos. Funny cat videos. Zefrank. Video game reviews and such. Translations, especially of phrases and sentences. The former hole can’t really be plugged. For video game reviews and other fun clips, I’ve subscribed to The Escapist’s publisher thingy. That way I get HTML5 video instead of Flash video, and they give me a higher quality as well. Eurogamer and Gamespot also have some video reviews. I only miss having the community reviews you find on YouTube. ...

November 5, 2013 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself, part 4: Mobile phone operating systems

Google’s Android rules the mobile phone market like some sort of ad-flinging gorilla, and it’s not easy to escape its grasp. On a default Android phone your mouth is firmly pressed against several of Google’s teats: Google Play, their app store, which requires a Google account. Gmail Contacts (integrated with Gmail) Google Calendars Google Maps Google+ Online photo galleries (integrated in Google+) Hangouts (replaces Google Talk) Currents (so they know what news you read) News and Weather There might even be more, but those are the worst offenders. To get rid of all of those in one shot, I moved away from Android to CyanogenMod. The transition was very smooth, I didn’t even lose the data on my (virtual) SD card. Since my phone has no physical card slots, I was a bit worried. Now that I have root, I can remove those Google apps. On a normal Google-flavored Android phone, those applications are protected and can’t be removed. ...

September 23, 2013 · Psy-Q

You cannot buy an ebook in Switzerland without surrendering to two foreign companies

I recently started reading Dan Simmons’ Hyperion Cantos. It’s a fantastic series of books. I had downloaded a cracked MOBI format version from somewhere – something that is legal in Switzerland. However, I also want the publisher and hopefully Dan Simmons himself to make some money, since I’m liking the books a lot and will probably read all four in the series. What I discovered is that even today, in 2013, it is impossible to legally buy an ebook in Switzerland without giving money to two companies known to be tax evaders and surrendering your personal information to at least one US entity. ...

July 17, 2013 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself, part 3: Maps

This is just a short article to let you know that life without Google’s mapping and navigation systems is possible. For mapping, I now use OpenStreetMap on the PC and OsmAnd on Android. For navigation, I also use OsmAnd on Android and Yournavigation on PC. So far, everything worked really, really well. I just have to use my eyes a bit more often and actually read what’s written on the map instead of relying on some weird additional overlay to take care of that for me. ...

July 15, 2013 · Psy-Q

The slow and painful act of ungoogling yourself part 2

I’ve written about getting rid of Google before, and that was before the whole NSA/PRISM shitstorm. I’m sure people today find even more reasons to get Google out of their lives. I wasn’t just doing nothing all this time either. Since the last post, the following has happened: My contacts are synced with my own CardDAV server instead of to Google, so Google won’t get their hands on my friends’, colleagues’ and family’s personal data through me anymore. My calendar goes to my own CalDAV server, so Google no longer knows what I’m doing when, where and with whom. DuckDuckGo has improved so much as a search engine that I don’t feel like I’m missing something by not searching on Google anymore. One problem still remains: I use an Android device, so you never know what else Google might be collecting through there. I’m watching Jolla and Sailfish as well as Firefox OS to see if and when there is some way to get a truly independent mobile device. That is the only piece of the puzzle still missing, and Google Play is the only way Google still gets at my stuff. ...

June 28, 2013 · Psy-Q

Cracking the DRM on Kindle ebooks

I recently bought a book through Amazon because their price was ridiculously cheaper than the competition’s. Of course their crazy DRM prevented me from using the book on my open and friendly Boox reader, but then I found Alf the Apprentice’s tools on his blog. I used Calibre, Wine and the Windows version of Kindle’s reader software, and ten minutes of fiddling later I could actually read the book I bought. ...

May 25, 2013 · Psy-Q

Google no longer supporting XMPP/Jabber

Update: Just like XMPP is slowly dying, Swissjabber has also kicked the bucket. Rest in peace, my friend. If you’re Swiss and need to have a Google Talk alternative for your XMPP-based chat needs, consider Swissjabber. I’ve created an account there and discontinued my Google Talk one, so if you want to contact me via XMPP, add psy-q@swissjabber.org.

May 22, 2013 · Psy-Q