Bone apple teat!
Lifter
The trick is to automate the transfer so that there is never that much to transfer. Transfer speed doesn't matter as much then.
Bald of you to not.
I can confirm them both. I'm considering moving to Debian because of this.
You can uninstall snap and use flatpak for those apps but it was a slap in the face when Firefox suddenly was replaced by a snap through apt
Nvidia is still closed source, even on Linux...
For me, the I is longer and the u more european as well. Like the u in pugs. More like "Leen-ux"
I suspected as much. I wouldn't expect that to work on Linux, especially since build the output is to be run on other Windows machines.
Visual Studio Code runs natively on linux. Not sure if that's what you meant though.
AI is the subset of math that concerns automated processes. AI has never been AGI, it's always been "stuff people make up to make the computer seem smart". Everything from chess computers to elevators to MML are all under - and have always been - included in the term AI.
There is a worldwide data dump (153 GB) once in a while. download.
You can spin up your own database server and a separate routing server, e.g. osrm.
You will inevitably fall behind in live edits though, forcing you to download a new dump periodically. As long as your own database doesn't need to have any edits, this should be fine, but tedious.
You will probably also need to host a tile rendering server ( https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Servers/Tile_Rendering) that will print the map, which can be quite computation heavy. The official servers have a lot to benefit from cdn/cache. Self hosters will not.
You also need a gui - perhaps Leaflet - to put it all together.
Cylinders are very hard to turn, why do you think them smarter?
I was speaking in general terms. Cloud storage is one solution. You photos are usually automatically uploaded. The most convenient solution for Android is probably Google Photos.
I use Syncthing, which can be setup on the Camera folder and only enabled when on wifi and power. Every night, my new photos are uploaded to a file server at home and then spread to all other devices.
Syncthing can also be setup to remove files from any device, just like how Dropbox and other such cloud storage services work. You can use this to keep the phone clean by moving the files out of the synced Camera folder on any other device. In my case, I also have a way larger Photos folder which will only sync to devices with more storage.
When the phone storage is staring to fill, I clean up/edit the new photos in the Camera folder - on a desktop computer - and then move them over.
Don't forget to also backup your files! If you make a mistake on one device, you may wipe the files on all devices ๐ฑ