Asking questions that are asked all the time in a sub or are already answered in the wiki. Not doing even basic searching for information before asking.
I think The Verge has been getting better over time. Its kind of a breath of fresh air they seem to mostly stay politically neutral and they occasionally use tasteful euphemisms while reporting very accurately. I miss Paul and Dieter but the newer people are doing great work too.
All of that is 100x harder than installing Graphene. Graphene can be installed by almost anyone who can watch this video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ZAZlmYKrwfk
Puh puh puh puh puh pa POWER!
I agree the balance is difficult and I agree asking later sometimes yields different results. My for instance about a sub and corresponding question asked endlessly is the privacy guides sub where people ask something like: "I'm using brave or firefox browser how do I be more private?"
Like my man you are on a discussion sub for a website literally full of instructions and recommendations with a link to that site pinned to the top of the sub. My goodness it can barely slap you in the face any harder.
It's not as bad as it was but the question is so vague that it almost demands follow up questions like what country, what threat model and what OS? It's not as bad anymore but it got super old and its the questions that are too general to be helpful and repeated hundreds of times over that really depressed me to read.
It took me a couple reads but I think its supposed to say wipe your paws but the A, W and S in paws aren't really correct cursive.
Google play music was the last straw for me. I will never depend on them for a service ever again. They just aren't reliable.
There are so many registrars out there that consolidation really isn't a concern.
Everybody that you meet Has an original point of view (That is now recorded)
Yea this too. If you are ever debating doing this search you up some aftermath pictures. People's femurs break and their feet are up by their face. Just don't do it.
I stand, for standing. Stanground.
But yea me too. Stand up to tiny kings.
You are the first person I've ever heard of that referred to the framework as thicker and clunkier. That's good for you that you buy used and have had your desktop PC running with the same processor for 4 years but also that's upgradable. You don't need to get a new case or power supply to upgrade components. It's not just about upgradability but reparability in case something breaks or you break something. Even supporting second hand market a macbook only has so much life. The hardware can go EoL and no longer get software updates but your screen and keyboard still work fine. Would be great to just upgrade your chipset instead of the whole laptop because the processor is so old that companies don't want to support it anymore.
Just going to add it does look like its available on android through izzyondroid fdroid repo. I'm not a developer and I wanted toupdates automatically as they are released so this is great.
I feel terrible for laughing. Good gracious.
Yards
My next laptop will be a framework. They offer parts and manuals and it is built to be fixed and upgraded instead of thrown away like almost everything else now. https://frame.work/