Some companies pay enterprise level prices to browsers (this could also be attributed to many free software) to have a direct line of support. They want to be able to ask "what the fuck is going on with this employee's software" and have a straight on answer; or some insight from the people that made that software. Without that support the product is the same as your typical browser.
My experience with my usb wifi dongle was different. It would work way faster on Windows compared to Linux for some reason until I replugged it some time and ever since it works in similar speeds. I couldnt reproduce what went wrong on the Linux one ever since.
The sponsor ads work when they're neatly aligned aligned with the video's concept. It wouldn't budge me to see a manufacturer sponsor a PC build video where one of their products are being used. Or channels like GradeA where they advertise the sponsors in a similar way to their vids.
What breaks it is when you can feel the ad clearly feels like a last minute insert (which it feels like almost all the time). Even the bigger creators out there do this.
You can write any term you want for your software. There have been instances of people adding terms to their licensing like "You hereby accept to forfeit your soul's ownership to the creator of this software."
Enforcing it is a different problem.
Fuck anyone that uses bots to advertise their crap from OF to every godforsaken platform; Other than that i don't care what others do.
If I knew the reason, chances are it would show "tried to cheat death" with a very close death time. I'd better off not knowing it; because I would definetly try to cheat against it. My lack of knowledge about it will let me live longer.
It's difficult if you have disk encryption on the same drive that you want to install Kinoite. Otherwise, its just a matter of setting drive partitions.
It's a different scheme. While the developers can print as many items as they want if they want to, the prices are entirely made out by the community. So they just manipulate the odds to make some items rarer. If they print the same items, the price will fall right off.
However why the game has this much players is that its really easy to bot.
This and the whole Team Fortress 2 bot situation (check Zesty's video for more details) requires Steam to implement something against botting in general.
The things that come to my mind are
-The country has a set goal to improve in tech industry, aiming to rival big countries like China.
-The people definetly know their spices. While they use it a bit too much at times, it certainly works well.
-The country is overpopulated, leading to talented people having harder time to succeed.
-If you're watching an Indian man's tutorial on any topic, you can assume it'll work well.
-It has a noticable split in religious beliefs.
-fuck the remote scammers operating from Kolkata. The people in India also hate these people.
As a fun experience, try downloading any sources you can on libgen about a low level programming language and then try to code on it without ever looking up the internet. Just these sources.
The fact that this is doable speaks volumes about how big of an information source it is. Not everywhere has good access to internet, but the knowledge to progress further is certainly obtainable.
Time traveler: Moves a book a few centimeters to the left
The butterfly effect at 9/11: