I'm using 6.3.5 on Trixie currently and have only experienced a few small bugs here and there. I tend to tweak and break stuff with any OS though. I'm extremely pleased with it's current state now and think Trixie is supposedly releasing in the next few months.
I'm an akleptic lover of music. I find most video game music lacking. In my 30 years of gaming, I usually turn off the in game music, leave the sound effects on, and use that opportunity to explore new music. That's just me though. To each their own .
I would highly suggest trying and sticking with Debian KDE. It does all that and more. I've been using it for years. Stable isn't bad, but I've found testing "trixie" better as it has plasma 6. I have done a fair amount of distro hopping on several different types of machines. I prefer anything with plasma 6 over just about anything. Mint is good, but cinnamon feels shackled compared to KDE. Especially with wayland and pipewire on Plasma being nice improvements over the past.
I have a projector, a nice audio system, and a built rig with AMD/AMD all running through Debian with Emby / Steam / Audacious. It's superb and likely the finest linux experience I've had to date.
Having played with these A LOT, my first question is, do you want an all purpose desktop or a gaming console?
If you simply want to play games with it, I'd recommend either Steam OS or Chimera. Some would suggest Bazzite as well.
I have had better success with performance with Debian testing "trixie" with KDE than Kubuntu or Mint.
Just my observations after hours and hours of tinkering with mine. I've had both the Ser 5 and 6. My experience was also similar, it simply had better frame rates on Windows. But I fucking hate windows, so I choose to play games faster with less graphical rendering.
While all of these answers are mostly true, you have to go back in time. Darwin called it the abomniable mystery. Flowering plants and insects co-evolved rapidly roughly 150 MYA. So prior to flowering plants, there were few plants and insects and they were mostly generalists. The rapid expansion and explosion of insect diversity is deeply entangled with the explosion of diversity in angiosperms.
I have both. The deck is not going to be great for anything PC. It'll be great for optimized gaming. Period.
I have actually had a few Beelinks. I immediately put linux on them, as I can't stand using windows. For linux, they work great. Mine is my main rig / torrent server / Jellyfin server. It works great for all of those.
There are different Beelinks, they do not all perform as well as others. I went the AMD route, as they play nicely with linux. The intergrated AMD gpu + cpu are also supposed to have a synergy (not sure the industry term for this) that intel + nvidia do not.
The Beelink, when not taxed, can spool down to less than 10 watts, which is incredible. The fan is not loud, even when taxed. I honestly don't even notice it ever, even a foot away.
I found the Ser5 wasn't capable of running even simple games well. The ser6 most certainly does. I tried both Windows and Linux, and the 6 was better. IF you can afford the Ser7, I'd say go for that. There is also the pricey GTR series, which is their premiums.
Also, consider Minisforum. They've got the best specs of any miniPCs, but pricey as fuck.
As for hardware quality, I've had my Tab S5E for years, and it is super solid. It looks, feels, and sounds great. It's one of the few samsung devices that can be unlocked and Lineage installed on. So, if you're willing to put in the time to install Lineage on it, it's android 13 and the newest version of Lineage on it.
As a mod on a few garden and science subs at that time, they were pernacious and ethically inept. They would associate anything anti-pesticide or GMO with being an anti science quack. And they would dog pile on poor individuals expressing concern.
I had several debates with them, often reported them for brigading, and ultimately had to ban them.
There's really no perfect standard for length in any format. I read on my phone so one page to you may be 5 pages to me.
I could see the word standard itself being the only reliable format. Like Standard Ebook uses as a measure for book length, but it may be hard to adopt generally.
"I read 567,000 words last month," may come off oddly. But certainly not unreasonable.
I like the idea of having one big book to read in a year. I have done that with East of Eden and the Glass Bead Game. Both of which are meaty epic books. I tackled them initially as a rebellion against the short attention span world we live in. Even in reading niches, I all too often see reading challenges that set # of book goals. I think it's absurd to claim that someone has read 20 books in a year that are short, verses one long book. The former is often applauded while the latter is not.
Karamazov has been one that I've been wanting to read all my life, so maybe I'll attempt it in 2024 myself.
Non linear writing is a struggle for me, but I try to challenge myself with it. I'm currently reading The Waves by Virginia Woolf which is incredibly abstract but beautiful. I assume Gravity's Rainbow to be similar. But it's a thick book too.
I'm simply trying to highlight that what happened to the native Americans is not simply "an aside," or a footnote in history but that it should take a sharp focus to what the US is or has been. This isn't about competing special interest group atrocities, but a fundamental question that is at the core of representative democracy. Too often liberal democracy is simply another way to exploit others, and disallow "other" groups from participating.
From a native perspective, living on a reservation in the US currently, it wouldn't matter much if it was run by republicans or democrats, as they both simply ignore treaties and obligations. From your perspective, it's a dire existential crises, but to those who have been swept aside both in the past and the present, it doesn't matter much at all.
I don't know how you can separate the idea of colonialism from the formation of the US. Seems arbitrary and without any philosophical basis.
As it stands currently, black Americans have better standards of living, in almost all developmental indices, than native Americans.
So by any scientific inquiry, native Americans have had it and still have it much harder than black Americans.
I'm using 6.3.5 on Trixie currently and have only experienced a few small bugs here and there. I tend to tweak and break stuff with any OS though. I'm extremely pleased with it's current state now and think Trixie is supposedly releasing in the next few months.