Nintendo was super competent with the Switch, their kernel is actually ridiculously secure. I’m pretty sure if Nvidia hadn’t messed up, we would still be scratching our heads with the Switch.
Nintendo was super competent with the Switch, their kernel is actually ridiculously secure. I’m pretty sure if Nvidia hadn’t messed up, we would still be scratching our heads with the Switch.
It’s not impossible or even hard to lock down Linux. Just look at Chrome OS, it’s Gentoo based, but with the bootloader locked and root access removed, it is pretty much immutable.
And Chromebooks just use off the shelf parts.
At about 24 years old I finally started feeling like an actual adult. Living alone, taking care of my things and my pets, having a stable relationship. Part of growing up is just accepting that there’s some of parts of you that will never grow up, I’m still a goofball and that’s just part of me.
Defederated by democratic vote*
My autocorrect messed up.
Exploding Heads is federated defederated by democratic vote.
Manjaro has broken AUR support multiple times on purpose. No thanks.
Customization is a big selling point after all. Just see how much hype there was for iOS 15 only because you could finally customize the lock screen.
Yeah, Infinity feels less polished, but expected considering how much older Sync is. The Android subsystem has worked well, I used the script that adds Google Play services so my purchases are synced between phone and desktop.
I don’t have iOS devices, but I already installed Sync on my desktop (W11 Android subsystem) and laptop. So I’m getting the same experience everywhere, with the added benefits of tablet mode on desktop.
Sync uses Material You. It’s using the colors of your wallpaper. And you can customize the theme manually on settings.
It’s subjective, but that’s exactly the reason why I dislike it.
It kinda bothers me to have an iOS UI on my Android phone lol.
Yup, if you tap and hold a setting, Sync generates a link you can paste on your comments.
There’s a lot they could have done, locking down Linux isn’t that hard. Just look at Chrome OS, it’s based on Gentoo, yet it’s locked down completely. All they had.to do is lock the BIOS, enable secure boot and disable root access, and then it’s pretty much a locked system.