Damn. I know housing is in full on crisis mode but that rock you're living under to save money is stunting your development as a seeing, thinking human being.
Well, let's be fair now, that's all it means to you, and you've loudly made your capabilities and agenda transparent for us all to see.
Happily, with even the tiniest modicum of critical thinking, one can see puffery such as this is the intellectual equivalent of dryer lint; to be scraped off a filter and discarded.
No, I have been using some form of Linux at home and at work since then too. I distro hopped for many years until one of my coworkers showed me Arch. Oldest story in the book right? I eventually ended up on Manjaro after a drive failure and the need to get something arch-based up fast.
To the substance of your point: no question that the internet was rougher around the edges too though in the early aughts right? Does you want an ActiveX or an ObjectEmbed? Let me load my 2000+ line navigator.appName giant if-then config for my site. Or how about when it was all tables and shim.gif and img tags with width and height. Good times.
There were plenty of these problems between browsers on just one OS. Or even versions of IE. I still see the rows of testing machines in my dreams sometimes, each with a slightly different version of XP and IE. 5.1, 5.5, 6. Ugh. Or how about the early days of flexbox when it was 7s turn.
Chrome wasn't even a thing until 2008 iirc, but that was also post safari-shaking-things-up too. And safari was from WebKit, and WebKit was from who? KHTML baby. (The K is for KDE.)
TLDR you're right, but I don't feel like it is, or ever was just Linux based OS's being targeted so much as bifurcation of standards, or just lack of all the relevant parties (like the W3C and browser makers) sitting down and establishing those standards. It's also a chicken and egg thing with tech too.
None of that is to say it never happened though, I'm just skeptical it was ever at any meaningful scale.
Yeah. I mean good luck taking care of anyone including yourself in the dystopian hellscape wrought be late stage capitalism. It's funny to be sure, but it's part of an act. Taking care of each other requires an environment that isn't toxic and bereft of food.
I've been playing with a locally installed instance of big agi really like the UI but it's missing the RAG part. I'm also cobbling my own together for fun and not profit to try to stay relevant in these hard times. Langchain is some wild stuff.
Gonna second you in this one. My Manjaro box is what I run to as a gold standard if one of my families windows machines using Chrome fails to load something. It's consistent, reliable and fast. What I think is missing from this conversation is: wired or wifi. One of the reasons the Linux machine is the yardstick is that it's not using wifi; never had a first page load fail.
Slack on Linux however... Eesh. Never had an app so reluctant to launch.
Having played TOTK on both the deck and on a bigger brother Linux desktop, it's for sure better on a machine that can has a reasonable, dedicated GPU. It's passable on the deck, enjoyable on the desktop.
Ollama is actually pretty decent at stuff now, and comparable in speed to chat gpt on a sort of busy day. I'm enjoying having a constant rubber duck to bounce ideas off.
And of course, we can rely on the universally true mutual exclusivity of always having a passenger when we need to navigate, and never needing to navigate when we don't have any passengers. As constant as the north star, that one.
I guess if it won't fix your whataboutism.....then "mmm yes you're abso-liootly right!"
But I say this in the voice of that tuxedo wearing Simpsons Yes-guy. If you'd prefer to be taken seriously, perhaps a post that is not completely irrelevant to the subject at hand is in order.
Damn. I know housing is in full on crisis mode but that rock you're living under to save money is stunting your development as a seeing, thinking human being.