Not gonna happen obviously. It's so funny to see every fedora announcement on linuxfr.org detailing every single aspect of the release while ignoring completely KDE.
It's even worse with Fedora in my experience. Always some weird default, strange issue, missing packages that take ages to fix until you decide it's not the right distribution for you. And you go with Debian, Arch, Manjaro, Mint, etc...
I agree with everything you said, that's fair. But I do not remember having to much difficulties coding UI interfaces in Qt while supporting numerous end-user configurations.
I feel like this article is completely missing my point.
I've done my share of programming websites but not for the past 2 decades. And now I'm completely lost at reading CSS. I can't make sense of the code shown in the picture. And that's always been my trouble with CSS: the tendency to unnecessarily over-complicate things while reinventing the wheel.
They have created a huge barrier for entry to the world of website programming and I think it's a shame.
As much as it pains me, I am convinced you're right. It's mostly an education / cultural problem. You can find similar situation in other countries of course but I've never it that extensive.
The result is having some of the worst politicians ever being elected, with no credible alternative.
Well, that's my experience as a Manjaro user on my daily home laptop for 3+ years. I'm really happy about it and can't make sense of the criticism I'm reading about it.
They do more than that. They basically triage individual updates in a testing environment before enabling them in stable. I can keep my entire OS up to date with all the latest security updates while remaining in the latest KDE Plasma 5 version as long as Manjaro thinks version 6.x is not stable enough.
Thanks for explaining, I was really confused there