The town I grew up in had no grocery stores, there was one small store a 20-min drive away that served all the surrounding towns. There was no work from home and if you had a job you had to have a car to get there.
The population was too small and too spread out to support any public transit. They now have a bus that goes from the center of town to the previously-mentioned grocery store, once a week on Sunday at 7am and then back at noon.
Still, getting to the center of town is quite the hike for many residents so I imagine for most a car is still essential.
And before anyone mentions the "infrastructure" being built for cars: this town was founded before cars were a thing. It was built for horses.
Then there is this image in an article about that on Wikipedia
I'm confused, are you trying to say cars are not needed because there's a railway every 100+ miles north or south of any point? Should people walk 100 miles to the rail station on their way to work?
The US/North America is huge, it's not like just providing public transit for all of Europe or something, covering all of America would be an orders of magnitude larger project
Eventually when the cool factor of light umbrellas wears off, traditional retro umbrellas will become cool again. But you can't beat the convenience of light-based rain protection
That's exactly why Android has this function, so they can only remotely access/wipe that profile. Everything in that profile is kept segregated from the rest of the system.
I've been using Linux for a long time on various other systems but what caused me to finally ditch Windows completely on my daily driver was:
A nonconsensual Windows Update which caused my bitlocker encryption to become corrupted and I lost everything on that disk.
This unscheduled reformat combined with all the other shady practices on Windows lately cemented my choice.
It's been several months now and I couldn't be happier!
The quality of gaming on Linux has advanced an incredible amount in the last year or so since I've tried it. Most of my games will either run natively or require a few extra clicks to use proton in steam. A few outliers that aren't on steam required Lutris.
On average I find the performance in games is better on Linux, even for non-native games using proton/wine.
Definitely would recommend giving it a shot if you are on the fence. Particularly if you've tried gaming in the past and were disappointed.
C) laid an egg
Should be obvious: it's a play on his name (Robin == a bird)