As long as it's not sold at a loss, that's not a problem for Valve.And if they want to they can sell it like they did initially with the Steam Deck, one purchase per Steam account.
So essentially you have a base system and you add what you need through flatpak, distrobox, homebrew, and if all else fails, by layering the packages on the base image with rpm-ostree.
What you can't do (that I'm aware of), is remove packages, or make bigger changes like adding another desktop environment aside what it came from. I mean, I guess you can do it by layering but it's probably messy.Configuration and customisation are not an issue: /etc and /var are not immutable of course.
Distrobox is super cool btw, I knew it existed but Bazzite pushing me to use it was what I needed to finally try and appreciate it.
It seems a little obtuse to conflate all of the EU countries' healthcare systems into one, given that they are different and that the EU itself doesn't legislate in that field.
Work, therefore Windows: has to be a tie between (new) Outlook and VMWare workstation. New outlook is absolute crap, just like all new windows app, I guess it must be Electron-based as it crashes or fails to load sometimes when you open it without connecting to the internet, and displays a blank window. VMware is such crap with poor performance, hang-ups and their fucking "this VM is already in use, take ownership?" dialogs that never work.
Home: I'd say FreeCAD. I mean, I love that they're developing it, I donated and I hope it'll have a similar trajectory to Blender, but right now it's really frustrating to use. Frequent crashes, solving errors, even adding a simple bevel is often a challenge, many simple things require complex procedures that make little sense to new users. It's crazy how, when you add a feature it can't solve, your model just disappears, and you have to open up the diagnostic buffer to find out why.
https://www.amd.com/en/products/processors/laptop/ryzen.html