After realizing the Godot package in Ubuntu was terribly outdated, I checked their snap store.
There are half a dozen Godot packages on Snapcraft, uploaded by random people. There is no indication of which a user should actually get, as none are "official". The one package that has a "verified" check also has a full description of just the word "blah", so it's clear it's not the real one and the "verified" checkmark means nothing.
Anyone that wants to upload something can. Non-functional, non-tested apps, others' work, abandoned apps, malware, etc.
And then the system ties your hands behind your back and refuses to let you control things like updates.
Snaps are an abortion and it has been turning people off to Ubuntu like crazy.
The old Pfizer doses would shut me down for 3 days.
Fever, chills, body aches, fatigue.
The first shot wasn't so bad. The second and third were insane.
I'm pretty sure I've had a fourth shot, but I don't remember how I felt. I think I got covid last year, after already having the third shot, and I've been dealing with symptoms for over a year now (mostly muscle fatigue).
I want the new shot with the new variant mix, but I'm also afraid of how I'm going to react to it. I have too much going on at work and home right now to take half a week off for the shot.
I have a pretty crummy immune system and have always dealt with autoimmune issues, so it's important that I get the shot, even if I react badly to it. :/
They were willing to fuck over some people and drive them completely out of business.
Which people? Developers. The very people that helped make Unity what it is. Unity wanted to completely crush their own developers. Some estimates put Unity's fees higher than 100% revenue in some scenarios.
Them back-tracking and saying "wow! we didn't expect this to be so hated!" shows that they either don't understand numbers (they do) or that they think their users are idiots.
So why would developers want to come back to them?
I'm still waiting for the spooky stuff I've been hearing about for years.
I'm being tracked. My information sold and exchanged. Big, evil corporations trading my data with other companies like it was baseball cards. All my inner-most desires leaked!
All to get an ad for a "litter box robot" or whatever when I'm browsing memes.
Motorola lost my business when they sold me a phone and then provided a grand total of ONE OS upgrade its entire life (Moto G LTE, shipped with an outdated 4.4 build, and then got a single update to 5.1 before being abandoned forever).
There is no potential for brand loyalty when the brand themselves tell their own customers to fuck off.
I found something I couldn't easily do on Linux...
I wanted to create a Shortcut to a GUI application directly on my Desktop on Linux (Ubuntu 22.04), and after fucking with Gnome extensions and googling multiple terms, I thought I was going insane. There is seriously no easy, standard, or simple way of doing that.
On Windows or macOS you can just click & drag to make a shortcut to a file, and then put the shortcut on your Desktop. Done.
On Gnome you have to manually create a .desktop file, fill it with the parameters to run the application (usually by opening a different .desktop file and copying & pasting the contents), ensure you also have Gnome configured to even allow desktop icons, and then copy the .desktop file to the Desktop.
The Gnome experience was the most-rigid, least user-friendly or user-customizable interface.
I guess the problem is that I shouldn't be using Gnome. I liked how simple & clean it is by default, but I hate how inflexible it is.
After realizing the Godot package in Ubuntu was terribly outdated, I checked their snap store.
There are half a dozen Godot packages on Snapcraft, uploaded by random people. There is no indication of which a user should actually get, as none are "official". The one package that has a "verified" check also has a full description of just the word "blah", so it's clear it's not the real one and the "verified" checkmark means nothing.
Anyone that wants to upload something can. Non-functional, non-tested apps, others' work, abandoned apps, malware, etc.
And then the system ties your hands behind your back and refuses to let you control things like updates.
Snaps are an abortion and it has been turning people off to Ubuntu like crazy.