I’m sorry but I can’t resist mentioning it. Manjaro implemented quite sus telemetry recently so you should keep it in mind when choosing and using it.
Arch user btw.
I’m sorry but I can’t resist mentioning it. Manjaro implemented quite sus telemetry recently so you should keep it in mind when choosing and using it.
I can’t define one favorite distro. I change my daily driver sometimes but it’s always something Arch based, even though I think OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is the ultimately best distro/base.
FYI I try it on Arch Linux.
But it’s very stable if you don’t mess around with those things and just use it.
I personally don’t consider it stability at all. I guess everyone has a different definition of it.
KDE has never been stable for me. I can find a bug within 10 minutes if I search properly. On the other hand, GNOME is stable for me as long as I don’t use sus extensions.
EDIT: just create a very wide vertical panel and try to move a clock widget in and out of it. Sometimes it’ll just disappear and often it will crash Plasma.
Everything You Wanted
Is decent stability included? I very much doubt so.
I think they are but Mozilla is not profitable and will be an expense source. Idk if it’ll make Proton negative but it definitely won’t improve their business.
Well all it’ll do is make Proton lose more money.
That’s the Mozilla paradox right there. A company like theirs cannot survive on the market without breaking their own ideals.
Plasma Mobile exists but let’s just say it’s not good.
Ubuntu Touch and postmarketOS use GNOME too.
GNOME. It even has several unofficial mobile focused versions.
Never heard of it.
I think it’s the other way around, mister/miss.
Oh I thought you had something against the OP or their source and wanted their domain blocked.
Well there’s more to it. For example, you can’t create an account with your real name on the shopping website and then pay with Monero. You need good opsec. Though 99.9% of online shopping providers don’t accept crypto in the first place.
most software is web based and OS-agnostic so there is no destruction and rebuilding happening
I don’t think EU backend and government job software is OS-agnostic.
and for everything else, FOSS is literally free
Yes but they need to switch and develop new utilities which is time and money.
Even if things breaks initially, the cost would equalize and long-term be considerably reduced.
That might be true depending on the maintenance costs of the new solutions.
if action = "Online shopping"
then if paymentMethod = "crypto"
then result = "Safe"
else result = "Unsafe"
KDE always gets more stable after a lot of minor updater. But it can’t be completely stable and then big updates ruin everything anyways. KDE has a ridiculous update model for a serious project. There’s not enough testing.