Young Portuguese have been emigrating for the last 50 years. The country is full of second residences, bought by people who took advantage of cheap real estate until recently.
Blaming today's inflation and cost of living on a few digital nomads or crypto people doesn't make much sense.
What also chocked me when visiting Lisbon or Porto is the number of old abandoned buildings in what I would consider nice areas. I have always wondered what was the reason for that...
Building a system & owning it is indeed an investment but often you have much more chance to stick to it long term.
Apps often come & go, transitioning from one to another can be very expensive.
Also if you want to be in control of the security & privacy DIY is the way to go.
I've used & loved Mozilla forever but at some point I am starting to wonder: when you fire 1/3 of your workforce & have obvious mismanagement problems, how can you still guarantee the security of such a complex piece of software?
Just from a performance point of view, opening LinkedIn webpage is a traumatic experience. I've rarely seen something so slow & heavy.
It's quite sad because LinkedIn gave birth to a lot of fantastic techs, such as Apache Kafka...
I believe Mastodon should support RSS, at least some users would use it at first as a feed aggregator as then progressively switch to the social media aspects of the platform.
I'm glad, Opera is offering native support for Wallets, ENS & IPFS. It is a proof that they can still lead the way.
There is also some progress made by Brave what will really help in term of market share.
Unfortunately native support on Firefox is not there yet... https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1354807
It is an ubiquitous legacy, a critical infrastructure of our societies and a spaghetti that cost everybody a lot.
In the end it is controlled by the biggest corporations and various interests. Very hard to disrupt and replace.