Article makes a lot of good points about the negligible EV innovation in the US due to major oil and gas producer interests. It seems like a chicken or the egg problem in the US where high power charging networks aren't built because there's not enough EVs on the road to demand better access while there's not enough EVs on the road because of a lack of charger access. Seems like unless there's a miraculous shift in US domestic EV cell production, the US is content to be left behind with overpriced ICE vehicles
100% I haven't needed a personal laptop for years but I'm hopeful that getting a framework 12 could open an ARM based upgrade path in the future once ARM based Linux support improves
I'd hope mint but it's probably Ubuntu
Is your CVT vehicle a Honda? I know Nissan CVTs have had their issues but the Toyota ones have a fixed/real first gear before they switch to the CVT to give you that reliable start from 0 mph/kph.
FAQ page has your exact question answered - saved you one click from the link above. Clearly a lot of effort has been put into the site because online spaces we've enjoyed can't be enjoyed any further even if we were interested in maintaining them ourselves as volunteers.
I love that aggressive splay on a unibody - my split keeb.io cepstrum moves around on me on different table surfaces so I'm considering a unibody design
That's their playbook. But honestly I think anyone who plays with WSL will either get a taste and begin learning/transitioning to Linux or device to stick with their "safe" windows machine
I mean the alternative was a liver transplant, and I have no idea how an infant liver transplant would even work. The only way doctors and researchers were ethically going to be able to treat someone with CRISPR is exactly this kind of situation
Nice! I was lucky to have extra drives when I switched to Linux on my PC, haven't done it on a laptop yet. Do you just back up all your data to an external SSD/HD beforehand or go the partition route?
Yeah, said I had to buy a tpm module for my mobo to upgrade to win11. My steam deck works so well running arch based Linux I searched "gaming arch Linux" in DuckDuckGo and installed CachyOS. Easier and cleaner than installing windows 10 when I built my PC and the constant updates are awesome (they also offer long term support LTS builds). Highly recommend, I have an Nvidia 2070 Super and CachyOS has been a great upgrade from Windows 10.
I haven't seen any accessibility features for x86 machines that comes close to Apple's switch control on iOS, but I also don't actively look for it. I'm curious if other device manufacturers will try to get into this market as folks live longer on average in countries with socialized medicine.
Makes me think about how this would change my life were I in Mark's position. Would be interesting to see games that are very accessible, controlling your own media seems like an easy win, and so long as you can see and talk communicating on demand is a huge life improvement.
Would be interesting to hear a system designed for blind folks.