I have to say, as a Linux fan in the 90's it was very cool to see Linux eating the whole server space, replacing older Unix while Microsoft tried desperately to grow Windows on the server market.
Communication is encrypted, it's https.
I have that in my ICE car and I never use it (map of gas stations correlated with remaining fuel). That's not specific to an EV.
Any of those features can be in a smartphone attached to your dashboard. Sure you have some benefits in accessing the car data, but they are small.
Use Firefox if you want but don't donate to Mozilla. Money doesn't go to Firefox development anyway.
Also if they can afford to pay their CEO $3 millions a year, they don't need your donations.
That's the thing, you think that because they keep saying they like their country more than the others, a foreign leader who hates and want harms to their country would be their enemy.
The truth is (1) they get a boner for the authoritarian way Putin leads Russia and (2) Putin treats them well because he knows that strengthening those parties weaken the country they're in.
Also Putin hates EU, and they hate EU. The difference is that Putin hates EU because he knows that European countries are stronger together.
Crypto means cryptography, stop using it to talk about cryptocurrency.
It is very well produced but there is very little actual content. He kept showing the same clips and saying the same thing over and over.
Bottom line is "in Steam Deck reviews, media is claiming Linux is complex without any proof or example." You don't need 5 full minutes to say that.
That's not how relations between employers and employees work.
It's like saying you don't need a democracy if the king cares enough about his subjects.
It might work for a time, but the power balance is such that you can't rely on the goodwill of leaders alone.
Who the fuck wears a VR headset walking in the street, let alone crossing a road?
Yes, it wasn't always the case. I was in the Silicon Valley in the 2000's and it was full of techies who really believed in the open web, and even Google was a proponent of open standards.
A few years later it seems like the tech matured enough that being technically savvy was no longer necessary to be a successful founder. Slowly it stopped being about technical innovations and became about raising money, product marketing, A/B testing, etc.
So if the average is roughly 10/20, that's about the same as responding randomly each time, does that mean humans are completely unable to distinguish AI images?
I don't hate Windows, I don't care about it. I don't use it.