It seems it's a separate thing from matrix.org, though if I was to guess maybe it's using the same software stack?
What steers me away from them using the same stack as matrix.org is that a compromised matrix.org server (only backend, if you control the element web frontend you can trivially get access to what's displayed there) still doesn't lead to compromise of messages, so it's either that the server compromise led to finding guys and having them unlock their phones, or it's actually a different stack.
Number for number, sure, if it's actually available at that price.
The problem is that Intel's drivers sucked in the past, so they definitely have to prove themselves with this launch. I definitely wouldn't be buying it release day if I needed a GPU.
There could theoretically be a vulnerability in your browser that would allow them to infect you with viruses, but such vulnerabilities are much much more valuable used elsewhere (or cashed in through security research bounties). One I've seen is that the page further phishes you into downloading and installing an "update" to your browser that's really a virus, or they simply try to phish you out of money, for example by asking you to pay the shipping costs again.
It's also a way to build lists of who actually clicks the links, that they resell to the next sucker (scamming is suckers all the way down, they all buy The Next Big Technique from some guy), ensuring you will get further spam in the future.
There's actually a fun technique to do to avoid further spams when it comes to voice calls. A little know fact is that elevator call buttons are actually just phones that have a phone number, and if you dial the number, it will automatically answer and you will hear whatever is in the elevator (generally nothing). If you pick up but don't say a word, their automated systems will flag you as an elevator phone number and they will stop calling in order to stop wasting resources on calling numbers that won't lead to money.
I guess the url it gave me was the literal mastodon post. I found this in !firefox@lemmy.ml, it's common to see mastodon posts there because everyone loves to tag @firefox and I guess mastodon resolves it to the most active community?
Dril is one of the most influential meme accounts on twitter, "generally a recognizable type: a self-important buffoon who's often raging out (show yourself, coward), or other times preening (buddy, they won't even let me), over some bit of nonsense that we're all meant to realize is absurdly unimportant." Wikipedia
The character (ostensibly not the actual person behind the account) is exactly the archetype of a user who would stay on current twitter.
It's... Not great. It's on par with other $300 laptops, which isn't saying much. 8Gb of RAM in current year isn't really enough anymore, and the screen is basically the cheapest possible. You're looking for a laptop with a screen resolution near 1920x1080, and ideally 16 Gb of RAM.
It's gotten very hard to recommend laptops based on the brand name, since pretty much every brand has started pumping out crappy laptops to capitalize on the brand.
Like others said, try looking at business laptops, either surplus or liquidation sales. They're not great either but at least you're ideally not getting fleeced.
If you're feeling adventurous (and I'm mincing my words, this won't be a breeze if you don't know much but you'll learn a ton), the best bang for buck you can get in a portable format is a Steam Deck with USB hub + mouse and keyboard (could be travel size if you want). Can be had for less than $500, if you have the budget portable screens also exist, and for that price it beats any modern laptop under $1000. I understand that it's not exactly for everyone though.
I love how this doesn't even begin to cover bad kbs ms pushed out. The fact that windows admins think testing updates before deploying them is a routine operation that should always be done boggles my mind.
I've been doing linux admin and honestly I haven't been looking back. My breaking point was Microsoft pushing a kb that rebooted domain controllers for no reason.
It seems your assessment is correct. You'd be surprised at the speeds you can get on poor wifi when you don't care about latency. The average speed marching up with your download is a dead giveaway too. The fact that maximum over 5 minutes exceeds it is a bit weird, but it could be explained by some networking equipment in the middle (probably at your ISP if I was to guess) terminating MTUs for whatever reason. A common one is misconfiguring various solutions for capping internet speeds to subscribers, where your local MTU will be set correctly but the outgoing ones will be set to the maximum speed of the link.
Pretty sure the TOR user agent is just default firefox, by design. It's very easy to detect OS with very rudimentary fingerprinting techniques, a lot of which are blocked by the TOR browser but they can never get them all.
69 is the postal code/région number for Lyon, a large city in France. There are a staggering number of things named thing69 blissfully unaware of the joke they're making, it's great.
Good being done for bad reasons is still good