Arch might actually be a great start if you had prior experience in Linux and want to learn more about it. For example, if you are in computer science and you are doing systems programming you probably have used Linux at the command line, Arch might be a great way to continue working on similar projects.
guywithoutaname
Before Chromebooks, my towns school system had netbooks which were pitifully slow on Windows. They installed Ubuntu instead. The netbooks still sucked, but probably sucked a lot less.
Yeah but they don't run the servers anymore. So I don't know what I'm paying for really.
Knowing GM they will lobby to ban Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.
"bank transfer"
Laughs in US.
I have to convince every one of my friends to switch because they all use SMS/iMessage. Outside of the US, you would have to convince every one of your friends to switch from WhatsApp.
It's kind of odd that they could just take random information from the internet without asking and are now treating it like a trade secret.
It's not doing anything other than predicting the next word. It reflects human data.
I think what's more convenient about an air fryer is that it is smaller than a convection oven. It's the next generation of toaster oven.
Don't like these either, but it's a nice break from being on my feet all day.
Galileo seems to be what they are calling the environment the USB boots to. This environment is moving from the XFCE desktop environment to the different KDE plasma desktop environment. These environments can both be customized, but they are very different under the hood. I imagine that you can still choose XFCE and other desktop environments from the installer.
No one is forcing you to use another app store. I'm sure the operating system will also allow you to turn off apps from unknown sources just like Android. More options for other people is not a bad thing. People paid for the device, they should be able to use it however they wish.