This seems like bullshit to me. I've not seen anyone complaining their VPN isn't working. And any business with staff using VPNs would not be happy if they managed to let that update get applied.
Not eating breakfast. Seriously. Breakfast is to blame for a lot of obesity. The idea that breakfast is the most important meal of the day is an invention.
I'm on Pixel 7 and current Firefox, but it won't install. It Just says "no app found to open xpi files"
Edit: fixed. Have to engage Dev options. Settings > About > tap the Firefox icon a few times. Then go back to settings and you'll see the "install add-on from file" option.
I may have over simplified. In the UK, especially in Yorkshire, the roads are hilly and twisty. We mostly drive manual cars, so we can ride the engine instead of the brakes when descending long steep hills. The Grand voyager struggled, and while I could lock that slush box of an auto in lower gears, it was not happy about it.
Chrysler grand voyager. It was relatively new, but omg it felt borderline dangerous. It was actually funny for the first 10 mins but I had to deliver this POS few hours away. On a straight smooth road it was like driving a sofa, comfy and soft. Once it entered a corner it turned into a boat, and stopping hard twice in a row had limited success. I asked the dealer where I delivered it too about how it handled. Apparently this is standard behaviour for Cryslers, and in the US it is fine (straight roads, limited hard breaking) and they love soft cars. In the UK we expect cars to stop and go round corners so we notice just how bad the Grand voyager is.
Most of them are stupid especially when related to uniforms. Example: jumpers must be worn in class even if in a heatwave. (I kicked off about this and they amended but the fuss was unbelievable). Coats off at the door even if it is cold and raining. You have to put coats on once you have left the building. Insane.
That's what EndeavourOS is for. Essentially it is just Arch with a fancy install, plus some minor tweaks and packages you'd probably install in Arch anyway.
The AUR and the wiki is what makes iArch so good. All other Linux distros rely on good forums and public guides, which means you need to be on Ubuntu or Debian for there to be enough content out there to help you if you get stuck. But with Arch most stuff is answered by the wiki or with a package from the AUR. Also the community is generally very helpful and direct in forums and Reddit posts making finding solutions much easier, in my experience, than other distros.
People switching to Linux forces a Rethink of how you do things. There is loss and change, and the mistake people make so often is thinking "I this in windows, why not Linux?". I think this is an understandable expectation because they look so similar. The trick is reaching this understanding and resetting your expectations.
I run EndeavourOS (Basically Arch), and I love it, but it doesn't do everything. I have to use windows for my music creation stuff because the instruments and effects I want can't be installed on Linux. I'm prepared to switch between the 2 OSes and I've slowly managed to move almost everything I do on to Linux by finding alternatives and accepting the different ways it does things.
Doesn't mean it will work for everyone but that's the way I think about it.
What, things like sudo rm -f /