Can we not? Silicon Valley sucks and imo hasn't done anything innovative for a long time.
mormund
Well China did subsidize that industry massively, to a point were their domestic market is flooded with very low margins. So the market is already very distorted. But I find it hard to hate on that because flooding the market with electric vehicles and solar panels is better than anything economists are coming up with.
Don't worry too much. If the EU passes legislation for this, you'll likely benefit from it as well, similar to all the other pro consumer things spilling over.
The only game I have on my phone! Such a great time sink when you're stuck on a train.
Maybe. But to me exile is what happens when a King has to live in another plushy castle because he's no longer welcome in his own country. Deportation is what happened to the Jews and minorities that got sent to Auschwitz. And if you're calling it mass deportation I don't think you are trying to hide the cruelty anymore. Cruelty is the point.
Maybe it's because I'm German. But deporting someone sounds just as inhumane and cruel as the reality we live in.
This completely ignores the fact that the AfD is a key part of encouraging that sentiment. They get paid tax money to promote hate and undermine democracy. Millionaires get tax credit by funding them. Media is forced to give them space. All this ends when they're banned. Will the same people try again and again? Yes, but democracy is about fighting again and again for your rights.
Full disk encryption is non standard and a PITA without a secure boot chain where the disk can be unlocked by the OS itself. If you have fun tinkering with your OS go nuts, but I want something that works every time even if install it for my mom. The current distro offerings aren't that.
No. You can edit the Kernel command line directly from GRUB before booting into anything else. That is the default behavior (with Debian).
Yes, it is more aimed towards "casual" users that want something that just works. But auto-updating policy is not really the point of the blog. Every distro is deciding that by themselves and will always be able to.
The default GRUB setup basically provides no security, even with UEFI secure boot enabled. On my default Debian install I can just edit the Kernel command line and get root without any password required. But beyond that, check out design goal 2 in this article https://0pointer.net/blog/fitting-everything-together.html
If I didn't miss it, no wireless charging again... Some one told me they refuse to do it because it wastes electricity. To which I'd say, even just turning on a car probably uses magnitudes more energy than charging my phone wirelessly. I don't want to mess up the USB C port if I don't have to, thanks.
I guess currently it's a chicken and egg situation for OEMs. They can't consider RISC-V based boards/laptops because there is no or minimal software for it. Also, porting to RISC-V can't be that expensive of an endeavor. Most unix software is already portable.