It finds it way to you in many forms, even if you disable it in one place.
Taskbar, Startmenu, Edge browser, the new Office to name a few.
They will push it wether you like it or not
It finds it way to you in many forms, even if you disable it in one place.
Taskbar, Startmenu, Edge browser, the new Office to name a few.
They will push it wether you like it or not
There are couple of things you have to do different if you're the underdog, don't make it a good guy Meta argument.
The models are marketing, and we can be fine with it.
As if the data just lays somewhere and just get collected, obviously it is sold to the highest bidder which knows what to do with it
Can i interest you in something called IoT
And you still have the value, nobody takes it away from you and you propably can sell it without loss which makes it still a good deal.
So does it not happen on X11?
Other than that, i have to clean my scrollwheel sensor once in a while, not because i'm disgusting, but because my current mouse has this issue, otherwise i get a similar experience as yours
Not the Debian edition
I do understand what you're saying, but not everyone will or should self host.
I don't know when you've tried the setup, but it's gotten to a point where i do find it very easy.
If you go the way with a pre built device too, all you have to do is creating an account and plenty device pop up immediately without any further steps.
The new step by step automation creation was all which was left to improve.
If you fail at that, you probably fail at other solutions too
You think my grandma fucks with Google Home or Apple Homekit?
Not everyone is up to the task anyway.
I've recently switched to the VM instead of the docker, the setup is so easy if you fail at that you shouldn't be doing anything with it to begin with.
You can buy pre-installed devices which are essentially plug-and-play
LTS distros and extremely delayed packages can give you problems for sure, the components used for gaming are very fast moving pieces fixing latest issues constantly.
While SteamOS is Arch based, i don't think they really use it the Arch way. It's run as an image based immutable OS, so they control the packages and not run at the bleeding edge.
You might run into problems more likely than SteamOS will.
Although i didnt't have problems gaming on Arch, it's not the same
So no ones at fault, if companies knew that they could save so much money. Apparently CEOs do fuck all and banking hundreds of millions.