There are a couple I have in mind. Like many techies, I am a huge fan of RSS for content distribution and XMPP for federated communication.

The really niche one I like is S-expressions as a data format and configuration in place of json, yaml, toml, etc.

I am a big fan of Plaintext formats, although I wish markdown had a few more features like tables.

  • pHr34kY@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    IPv6. Stop engineering IoT junk on single-stack IPv4, you dipshits.

    Ogg Opus. It’s superior to everything in every way. It’s free and there is absolutely no reason to not support it. It blows my mind that MPEG 1.0 Layer III is still so dominant.

  • webbureaucrat@programming.dev
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    16 days ago

    I’ll give my usual contribution to RSS feed discourse, which is that, news flash! RSS feeds support video!

    It drives me crazy when podcasters are like, “thanks for listening to our audio podcasts. We also have a video feed for our YouTube subscribers.” Just let me have the video in PocketCasts please!

    • monk@lemmy.unboiled.info
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      6 days ago

      I just wrote a YouTube scraper and exported to RSS and into my podcast client. Using YouTube any other way is masochism in comparison.

  • mox@lemmy.sdf.org
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    17 days ago

    ISO 8601 date format. Not because it’s from a standards body, but because it’s simple, sensible, clearly defined, easy to recognize, and very effective.

    Date field placement in any order other than most-significant-digits-first is not only counterintuitive, but needlessly complicated to work with. Omitting critical information like the century is ambiguous and confusing.

    We don’t live in isolated villages any more. Mixing and matching those problems by accepting all the world’s various regional and personal date styles, especially with no reliable indication of which ones apply in any given case, leads to the hodgepodge of error-prone date madness that we have today.

    The 2024-09-02 format should be taught in schools and required in official documents. Let the antiquated date styles fall into disuse outside of art and personal correspondence, like cursive writing.

  • filister@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    The metric system, f*ck the imperial system. Every scientist sticks to the metric system, and why are people even still having an imperial system, with outdated measurements like stones for weight blows my mind.

    Also f*ck Fahrenheit, we have Celsius and Kalvin for that, we don’t need another hard to convert temperature measurement.

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      16 days ago

      Not matrix? XMPP is a good idea, but the wildly different levels of support among clients cause problems even back in its heyday Matrix solves some of that, fully encrypted, chat history stored on the server in encrypted form, supports gateways to other services.

      • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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        16 days ago

        Those problems you speak of about XMPP are not really a concern anymore and haven’t been for a while.

        Matrix on the other hand is very difficult to implement, and currently there’s only one (maybe two?) viable implementation choices. It is way over complicated, resource intensive, and has privacy issues.

        • timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works
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          15 days ago

          Does it have privacy issues compared to XMPP which doesn’t enforce the privacy extensions? I figure they are about the same there. Asking genuinely as I do not know other than Matrix might leak some metadata.

          And quite frankly, I really wish we’d just agree on one or the other. Would love to host an instance and move some people to it but both are just stuck in this quasi-half used/half not state. And even people on here can’t agree what should be “standard.”

          • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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            15 days ago

            Xmpp definitely wins in privacy. What is there to privacy more than message content and metadata? Matrix definitely fails the second one, and is E2E still an issue for public groups? I don’t remember if they fixed that.

            XMPP being a protocol built for extensibility means it will be hard for it not to keep up with times.

            On your point of picking one or the other, I’d say pick the one you like and bridges will help you connect to the other. But XMPP came way before matrix, and I believe they fractured the community instead of building it.

            There’s a good reason all the big techs built on top of xmpp (meta, Google, etc). It’s a very good protocol and satisfies modern demands very well.

            • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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              6 days ago

              Xmpp definitely wins in privacy. What is there to privacy more than message content and metadata? Matrix definitely fails the second one, and is E2E still an issue for public groups? I don’t remember if they fixed that.

              XMPP being a protocol built for extensibility means it will be hard for it not to keep up with times.

              Okay so how does modern XMPP protect this? When I last used XMPP, some (not all) clients supported OTR-IM, a protocol for end to end encryption. And there wasn’t a function for server stored chat history (either encrypted or plaintext).
              Have these issues been fixed?

              • ambitiousslab@lemmy.ml
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                2 days ago

                It’s not perfect yet, but it’s much, much better than the old days.

                OMEMO is supported by every major client, and they interoperate successfully. Unfortunately, most clients are stuck with an older version of the OMEMO spec. It’s not ideal, but it doesn’t cause any practical issue, unless you use Kaidan or UWPX, which only support the latest version.

                All popular clients and servers support retrieving chat history now too.

                In practice, I’ve been using it for several months to chat with friends and family, and haven’t had any issues.

  • kersplomp@programming.dev
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    16 days ago

    Zigbee or really any Bluetooth alternative.

    Bluetooth is a poorly engineered protocol. It jumps around the spectrum while transmitting, which makes it difficult and power intensive for bluetooth receivers to track.