Yeah, which is what I said. It's great, but an alternative solution is an alternative solution. If someone is sharing a file to a group with Airdrop, you are not receiving it with localsend.
If you own a domain you can redirect all to a single inbox, so there is nothing to manage. You register at randomsite? randomsite@yourdomain.com it is. Every account gets a unique email address, all emails end up in the same inbox, and there is nothing to do, you have infinite addresses.
And you never share your actual Proton address where it all ends up.
The format replaces "on the scale of 1-10", with "on the scale of X", making it deliberately lose the the meaning of scale. The possible answers are no longer 1 to 10, but X. On a scale of X, I am X. And you can choose which X, but it's not supposed to be a scale.
Which is great, but it doesn't solve the interoperability problem of being able to AirDrop files between someone's iPhone/MacBook and your Linux/Android
I rewatched the series finale now, and his conclusion seems as I remembered:
He had great experiences gaming on Linux
His kids used it too without problems
"freaking amazing"
"totally stable, no crashes", he was playing multiplayer with a friend a lot
Remote Play Together from Steam works great too
He learned a lot, will give it another go in the future
But it's not for him yet as a big VR lover
He really wants Linux to succeed because he hates the Microsoft monopoly
He didn't even bring up his issue in the conclusion. If you can timestamp any "fuck Linux", I would love to see it, because I really doubt he ever said that.
That being said, while it's obviously his fault for ignoring warninigs, it's ridiculous something as basic as installing Steam got him into that situation in the first place, it's pop os's fault for shipping a broken package. And yeah, things like that really don't happen on Windows.
The explanation made sense to me. They found Honey was stealing from creators, but still saving money for users, so it would be very self-serving to make a fuss about it, instead they only let other creators know. From the users point of view it was still a great product (from what was known at the time).
This is true, but the CEO change had nothing to do with it. It was already happening before any of the drama, due to Linus wanting to have more time for making videos instead of having to manage the company.
That's what most people took away from the drama. No one looked into it later to find out was made up because that's no longer interesting. As is usually the case with Internet drama.
(Emails eventually came out showing Billet Labs told them to keep the cooler, and then lied about it)
No one in the comments seems to be realizing this, but the layoff is at the company who is the publisher of Subnautica 2 (among other games), for their Korean employees.
Not at the studio that makes Subnautica 2. This has nothing to do with Subnautica 2 and doesn't affect it.
It is you who is misinformed, because they did specifically say you will be able to bypass it with ADB (which now is going to be made easier, presumably).
Source?