

not even close


not even close


what does storage have to do with ram?


creating the “ai” in the first place also required the evolution of those 100 billion people. So by that argument, he was behind before he even started, and it’s impossible to catch up


i use keepassxc for the offline database part, and syncthing to sync it (among other things) between all my devices


so you’re saying it is the wrong word, because most apks are downloaded from the internet on-device. That is not a local transfer


what if it’s poinsoned data, and i instruct you not to crawl it, but you do it anyway. Whose fault is it then?


the term spells out “crap”


arch v debian?


LESS CHOICE!
Choice is only exciting for us techheads. Too much of it actively harms adoption.


and they just dropped support for pascal :/


he literally said it was not one of the features cherry picked to be reimplemented. So he did say, paraphrased, “because we couldn’t be bothered”


the reason is literally “because we decided not to implement it”
Saved you a click.


doesn’t change anything if you can’t avoid having to write the unsafe parts


i don’t want flatpak either
a compatibility layer would involve dedicated hardware in the soc itself, like apple did with the m series chips


you seem to be confusing an operating system for the user interface. An os can (and regularly does) have more than one interface. In this case steamos ships with two of them. One they designed which is targeted for games. And they also ship plasma as a desktop environment for those who need it. The operating system lies under all that, and you can launch any piece of software from either of the interfaces. (or the terminal, that counts as a 3rd way to interact with the computer, I guess)


as amazing as snake was as a toy on phones, it still doesn’t make sense to put a copy of snake in outlook. Or notepad, or paint, or office, or as an always available widget in the task bar


because they haven’t? We don’t want any changes to our ability to install software. This would still kill f-droid, and the “flow” they talked about isn’t a system wide setting. You have to do it per app. And you, the owner of the divice who just wants to install something on your device, would have to register. So if too many people install the app, the dev would be forced to register as well.
How is any of that “listening to user feedback”?
as a beginner, this was what made me move away from ubuntu years ago. And something wrong will sometimes end up with you messing up your system. Ubuntu just isn’t a good beginner’s distro anymore.
and a block of ice and you are also mostly made of water. Still doesn’t make sense to compare them