geography also teaches you how the weather affects the earth via erosion, which lets you predict if it's a good idea to build a house somewhere (not really relevant in 2034 though)
yes, you dont need to know about the history of the weather and why it happens to understand that it will be raining tomorrow. But, i think it's kinda relevant to know how and why to understand what side of a conflict to support.
geography also helps you understand the claims politicians make and to see if they're bs
controversial opinion: distro/software wars are good, because they make people discuss about their software, which motivates the developers. you don't see windows software wars, because they can't choose their de
ngl, typing paru/yay [description of repo] is faster than downloading and installing the repo. even if you install it with git, you still need to know the git link.
yes. arch is some effort to configure and get working properly, but once it works it's so nice
(well, it was for me. I respect you if you have your own opinion and distro preferences)
yes it is. you learn how the world works. what gets exported from where. where the refugees come from and to, and why. what conflicts there are, where, and why.
appliences that connect to your internet are supposed to be secured, but cheap Chinese ones usually arent. this means they can easily get hacked and added to a botnet thats used for DDoS attacks. I once saw a screenshot of someone whose washing machine uploaded ~30GB of data per month.
the best thing to do against this is to just not connect them to the internet.
that's... what I said? geography helps you understand what each side intends to do and is capable of doing.
geography ≠ topography