As a long time Linux user, if kernel broke anything for me, and it used to fairly regularly, I would just roll back to previous kernel. Fedora makes it easy, by default you can just boot into previous version by selecting it in grub menu.
File a bug, roll back, keep the bug report subscribed and only update after it's fixed.
I have no experience with Windows for ARM, but what I know of Windows update tells me the patch environment for that platform haven't gotten up from before rollup era and a new image needed to process hundreds of updates. Especially if it was and "old" image.
I'm not exactly a low end mobile user, but holy crap that phone is expensive. Even for 7 years, that up front is kinda bonkers. I guess, since it's "Pro" you're supposed to put it in as expense and lease or something.
I've been using podman instead of Docker for a couple years now. I'm not a heavy user, but it doesn't ever break for me and I appreciate the pods and ease of turning pod config into a kubernetes deployment.
Winget is pretty cool, but I'm not sure how it works exactly. The package sourcing, like anything Microsoft does is a bit sus and I'm worried it's crowdsourced.
It's great for passively checking for new versions of most software you got installed, won't argue with that.
Amazing, I've been saying this for years, start retraining, trade programs for those guys and they wont demolish the parliment when you start closing down the ridiculous mines. We import coal from China for crying out loud, nobody can afford our coal, and it's not even sold at a profit. I'd say about time, but 10-15 years too late is also appropriate.
I've been playing Kingmaker, my first contact with Pathfinder, and when all my characters suddenly started hitting 2-4-5 times in a round around level 10 I honestly didn't know what to think about it.
Maybe. Depends on the usecase. I've been running wayland for a year or so without trouble. Using moonlight to another machine for gaming and such.