this post was submitted on 09 Feb 2026
12 points (100.0% liked)

HomeComputing

125 readers
1 users here now

For people sick of everything requiring Internet connections, online accounts and subscriptions

founded 4 days ago
MODERATORS
 

What do we mean by Home Computing?

Home computing is one of the greatest inventions of the late 20th century. Emerging from a time when only large organisations had computing power, ordinary people gained the ability to run computers independently in their own homes, without needing to connect to a machine owned by somebody else.

In the last couple of decades, however, Big Tech has been trying to reverse this, forcing people back to a centralised model with cloud computing, apps that only work when connected to the Internet, and people's personal files held in an online account that can be deactivated at any time by the platform hosting it.

But this isn't a community for complaining about them. This is a community for discussing ways to bring computing back into our homes.

This community isn't against using the Internet entirely, of course. Some uses of the Internet cannot be performed offline, such as sending messages to other people, or running software updates. These are perfectly reasonable. What's not reasonable is being expected to connect to someone else's server and log into an account for every little computing task.

Good posts

  • Asking for recommendations for home computing hardware/software
  • Giving recommendations for home computing hardware/software
  • Asking for help setting up home computing hardware/software

Bad posts

  • Articles and/or rants about the latest example of centralisation committed by big tech (we know big tech sucks, that's why we are here)
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Red Flags:

  • Always Online
  • User Account Sign-Up Required
  • Paid Subscription
  • Cloud Computing
  • Software-as-a-Service
[–] Libb@piefed.social 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I'm not sure I understand the need to avoid the Internet connection?

For me, home computing is about:

  • Making good use of the hardware one probably already owns. No need to constantly be purchasing the newest whatever. An dot favor easily upgradable/repairable hardware instead of the shiny expensive e-waste... something I know quite well from personal experience: I had been an Apple user since the early 80s up until maybe 6 years ago.
  • Not relying on third party services, or as little as possible. And learn to do stuff ourself. Heck, I learned to use ssh to post my blog and image magick to optimize the size of the pictures, I was nearing my 60s... Like I learned to mend clothe, and to solder (I wanted to be able to fix our simplest electronic device) when I was in late 40s ;)

But I do use the Internet. Daily, or almost. I just seer away from the social media (I'm on the fediverse, that's all my online 'social' presence) and all the 'must have' trendy apps and services. Heck if I was not married already, I would not use an app to date. I would do like we used to do up until rather recently: I would go talk to any woman I would have deemed interesting enough.

I even use a cloud (just not GAFAM) ;)

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

Thanks for commenting. I checked my comment, and it seems I did just write "Internet connection" - just a mistake from rewriting the comment and not leaving it in a coherent state. Sorry about that.

I use the Internet daily as well. I'd just like to avoid being locked-in to some remote service.

For someone to participate in this subreddit, they only need to want to rely more on hardware/software that they control instead of those controlled by someone else. As for why they might want this - different people might have different reasons.

A few possible reasons people might be interested:

  • They have an unreliable Internet connection
  • Concerns about the privacy implications of using centralised services
  • Centralised services can arbitrarily change their behaviour or interface at any time
  • "Smart" devices that require use of a networked app can often be less convenient than "dumb" alternatives
  • Centralised control over one's operating system can mean unwanted updates being forced on the user
  • Concerns about having access revoked due to financial difficulties or other issues

But the community is open to members regardless of why they are interested.

[–] Libb@piefed.social 2 points 4 days ago

As for why they might want this - different people might have different reasons.

And they're all perfectly fine reasons, if you ask me. To give you some context, despite living in a big city with a real fast Internet access I worked my ass of in order to optimize my blog so that it loads as fast as possible even on a shitty connection. And will update it every time I find a new way to optimize it a little more. (if you're curious, switching to the AVIF file format for images was the most impactful change, next to using no script at all, it's only static HTML/CSS, obviously reducing the overall size of the pages ;)

I also moved back to reading print books/newspapers out of privacy and ownership concerns.