Not necessarily for scraping but large bot account farms do use llms to parse text to know important parts of the site to interact with. Usually they run cheap ram only llms that don't use much resources (300mb-1gb of ram)
Yes they elected the guy in charge (his words) cause he's black, almost as soon as he walked in the door. He's a communist and I was the only other minority there (trans) and we joked around a lot and drank some beers together later.
I think its hitting a critical mass, that much upward growth is very encouraging to see. I was able to convince a handful of friends to switch to linux due to windows getting so bad, they liked the extremely simple approach Bazzite has. I think its better than Mint in this regard, Fedora has come such a long way.
Mmm sometimes if you don't update for a long time you can't really update at all without following specific instructions. Nobara for instance had a major breakage between 41 and 42 versions that required you to debug from a boot drive iirc. One of my friends just had debian break on their not very used laptop and it can't upgrade. Bazzite will not have these issues, image based upgrades solve the broken upgrade and config drift problems. And if for some reason it does break, it's always solved by a one line rpm-ostree rebase command. Whereas with other distros the process to fix it is very involved usually
Its not particularly crazy, most things can be installed via flathub. If something isnt there, install it through distrobox (you can install things through the AUR, packages like rpm and deb, etc). And if that doesn't work, install the app directly through rpm-ostree (only thing I did this with was a vpn app, you can point to a .rpm file for this). I use flathub for the vast majority of things, I think I only have two apps installed outside of it.
What's great is nothing ever breaks this way. Ever. It all works. Broken upgrades haven't happened to me after a year of using this, meanwhile I had plenty on debian and small distros like manjaro, mint, cachyos, nobara.
Based on commits both projects have a core dev team of around 5 members, organic maps has a lot more small contributors however likely because its an older and more known project. Comaps seems to be solving more important issues with routing though imo
It's truly a fantastic distro. Fedora atomic is very much an attempt at making Linux as easy and secure as Android. I recommend it for beginners and experts alike, truly awesome tech going on.
some time ago, why