We already spend a lot of effort keeping data private, and also making data accessible. But I don't expect all information to be put in a big database for everyone to see. The point is, no one can say no when asked for data.
Sort of. I think it will never regain the edge of sole it every had one the past, and it will evolve to something lmore on par with Facebook in that a generation will continue to use it but the next generation will forget it.
Except where actual safety is concerned, all information should be public. That means Individuals, businesses, authorities, governments, etc, should not be able to hold any information privately, it should all be freely available to everyone. There only private information is what you can hold in your head.
Anyone who thinks about this idea for more than 30 seconds decides it is a really bad idea. I honestly believe that true information freedom will also free the human race, and that is the unpopular part. Everyone seemed to think I'm naive but people are just frightened kids and secrets are their first line of defense.
It is essentially a full fledged PC. It uses the same AMD APU (CPU with built in GPU) as the PS5 and Xbox, has expandable storage. There are other similar and more powerful competitors but the steam deck has the best price and has out of th box support for a shit load of games using Steam. It also user serviceable.
I already curate my own watch history and occasionally go on a remove spree when my recommendations get stale or full of shit I don't really care about.
Easy of use and general look and feel have always been less than ideal on windows. The real advantage of windows over Linux is hardware support. And don't say it all just works, because it does not.
Sounds like a driver problem. What kernel are you using, and have you tried running Mesa-git?
I'm not messing with the kernal at this point, just using whatever gets installed by default. I haven't looked at Mesa-git. If messing about with the kernel is required I might just wait until wayland and kde have matured enough to support adaptive sync and multi monitors better.
You can’t find any errors because there are none. The brightness changing with the refresh rate is sadly how most monitors work today, and can’t really be fixed. It’s the whole reason for why adaptive sync is not set to always by default.
I also tried "auto" which seemed to be ok for a few seconds but then behaved the same as always. I can live without it for desktop stuff, my concern is adaptive sync won't be on in games without enabling that settings.
I'd like to explore messing with custom kernels but I've got a bunch to learn first. In the mean time it kinda feels like I'm stuck with no straight forward or standard way to ensure multiple monitors works at least. I've spent 2 days on this and still found no answer so I'm hoping someone will post a helpful hint or 2.
I'm on the cusp off jumping to Arch. Before I do I'm replacing my rtx 3080 with an RX 6800 XT. They are close enough in performance and identical pricing on eBay.
I've done a bunch of testing and found great support for all my hardware except my Razer Ripsaw HDMI capture device, which I can replace with something supported. It is just the Nvidia bullshit holding me back.
Until we have physical, undeniable evidence it is all just words. But, the reason I talk out load when I'm alone is for the aliens who might be watching me. I want them to hear my explanations for why I'm worth visiting personally / why I'm reading memes and not building a star gate out a 7 toasters and a mountain bike.
UK. Yip. Water "hardness" varies across the country which means people usually prefer the taste of the water in the region they grow up in. Other than all the leaky underground pipes and lack of investment in a privatised service, UK water is actaully very good.
Yes and know proving your identity would come under the category of "risk of harm" so can be protected.