That's correct. It's generally recommended for lenses to have at least over 100 Dk/t for sleep and they need to be approved for that. Dk/t is the measured oxygen transmission through the lens material, the higher, the better. I would not recommend lenses with Dk/t of 30 and under even for daily wear as they starve eyes of oxygen. Especially since there are very affordable ones with very high Dk/t like Miru and Biofinity (around 160 iirc).
Actually that's not as absurd as it seems. NAND memory starts corrupting data if it doesn't get any current for few years. I'm not sure if just power on USB triggers it or does controller on device need to be specifically activated by OS detection. I guess controller goes on the moment it gets power.
I got Commodore C128 as my first computer when rest of the world was solidly running Pentiums. That had to be around 1997 or something. That might explain my "acquired" taste in games.
Looks more touch focused and friendly. Not necessarily bad on a mobile device. This might be rare occasion I don't mind a rsadical change done by Mozilla. Haven't actually tried it yet, just looking at the photo...
Though sometimes it's nice to see options even if not available. For example I didn't know KDE offered GUI to control Bluetooth adapters. My internal one in laptop is glitched and in GNOME you don't know which one will be used if you add external USB BT dongle. Meanwhile KDE offers simple toggle to turn off adapter of choice via GUI and thus only allowing USB BT to operate. For others like GNOME I had to fiddle with weird terminal commands to do it and edit config file, in KDE it was a simple toggle button that I could see.
Just example.
CoMaps and OrganicMaps are really cool and integrate with OpenStreetMap to edit places and stuff.