Well, to be fair the 10 series was actually an impressive improvement to what was available. Since then I switched to AMD for better SW support. I know since then the improvements have dwindled.
Asynchronous trim is interesting to see in a performance optimized config. I remember it actually being slower at deleting files and causing more ware on SSDs that periodic trim.
Usual tracking and fingerprinting issues. Would need to sandbox it to make it secure, but that then makes the fake traffic easier to identify. Not worth it in the end.
I was surprised to see they switched from wpa_supplicant to iwd. I love iwd on it's own, but the last time I tried to use it with NetworkManager it blew up on me. Seems like that may still be an issue.
I think one has to cope with it the same way the inventor of the ice pick had to cope with Walter Jackson Freeman II. You can't really control what people do with your tools. If you think someone actively destroying lives will bend to the whims of a license, that's cool. I wish I had that level of optimism. Right now it's still pulling teeth to get companies to respect GPLv3.
It does inherently lean into the concept of corporate forks over community forks. A byproduct of prioritizing monetary gain. I think the license is really just a foot in the door to allow for community audits. Realistically I don't see anyone wanting to contribute to something like this unless the product has slim to no real competition.
All of these alternatives and you missed the best one ripgrep (rg). The other ones in my opinion are nice to have. Recursive multi-threaded grep that respects gitignore files is a must for me.
Well, to be fair the 10 series was actually an impressive improvement to what was available. Since then I switched to AMD for better SW support. I know since then the improvements have dwindled.