I would have figured the whole point of the project is getting to feature parity, right? It makes it a harder sell if you lose a bunch of them when migrating to Linux.
I dunno, I think we as a society have been restricting the rights of teenagers more and more. I've helped a lot of young adults access resources to escape from less than stellar parents unfortunately.
I wonder if one of their existing mainboards would fit in the form factor of something like a Legion Go (which is quite a bit larger than a Steam Deck)
Source? Only reason I'm using Apple Maps in the first place is because I need public transport directions and it's not Google Maps. Organic Maps doesn't have them, and I don't want to use the app my state gov puts out because the way it calculates connections is garbage. Most international PT-only apps don't have my city even though it's the biggest in Australia.
I genuinely believe that if he was still around he'd of ended up a proponent for federated social media. I'm pretty sure he was the driving force behind opening it's source, and it wasn't until four years after his death that it was closed off again.
Except you're wrong about them wanting to put Rust code in the DMA subtree. As per the article linked below by M1ch431:
In a message to the Linux kernel mailing list, Hellwig wrote: "No Rust code in kernel/dma, please." For what it's worth, the patch added code to the rust/kernel portion of the Linux source tree, not kernel/dma, as far as we can tell.
All they were doing is adding an abstraction layer, within the already existing Rust code, so that rust drivers could communicate with the C DMA code in a uniform and predictable manner. It would have put far more work on maintainers, both C and Rust alike, to have each and every driver implement its own abstraction to the DMA API. Issues would have been/will be filed against the kernel/dma subtree in error due to issues with these myriad abstraction layers.
I've hit them with my powered wheelchair several times. They've also tried to close on my chair but they do seem to pop open if they close on someone/thing.
Apple Intelligence isn't in the same league. It's entirely local-only, except for when it specifically asks/offers to use ChatGPT for certain things. Even Siri has been local-only for some time on most devices (notably not homepods).
Then why are you here in a linux comm? It feels like you just want to be contrarian...