Yes I understand how the Steam Deck and verified ratings work, but thanks for the explanation.
Ulrich
They're functionally indifferent, for purposes of this conversation.
You can use it for absolutely anything. That's the beauty of Linux. Will it be good for it, as is? No, not really.
A lot of streaming services will limit you to 720p unless you use their first-party apps, which they don't make for Linux.
Also the interface is not ideal for that sort of thing.
Leaving it plugged in permanently is not really good for the battery, but not a huge deal either. There's probably some way to enable a "kiosk mode" to keep the battery @ 50%, which would be ideal.
I dunno, is it?
If I know the name of the package/application
How do you know it?
There is a package manager for Windows
Yes, that's what I said.
WinGet I believe
LOL it's just called Microsoft store, my dude.
Objectively, huh?
Yes huh
I can have a package installed by the terminal before Discover (the GUI for installing packages) even opens
Just lying again. You'd have to go and search what words to type in first.
And going to a website to download an executable to install a specific piece of software, which you need to give permission when executing to get through the firewall because (to your system) it's just some random executable, isn't?
I don't know what you aren't understanding about this. All 3 OSs have package managers that function similarly. What I'm talking about is when the software is not available in the package manager....
Then having that executable check for updates when launched and sending you to the website to download a new installer
You've really never used Windows before, have you? That's once again not how it works. Maybe give it a go and come back after you've got some experience.
Is Microsoft paying you?
You could make an argument for such a thing insofar as time is money. And like they say "Linux is free so long as your time is worth nothing."
It does a lot more than it's told and you know that
All different tasks under the umbrella of "install this software". I don't understand the relevance.
Ideally, yes. Whatever you want. Not whatever bad actors want.
So Windows will install malicious software and Linux won't...? Even if you tell it to? No.
The answer is the file extension doesn't do anything
Again I don't understand the relevance.
I literally never use that and don't understand why anyone would want to. All of the filters I create are created manually (other than spam). When it comes to those, Proton is leaps and bounds better, mostly because Gmail filter creation is just shockingly awful.
It helps that I try to get away from email as much as is humanly possible, in general. Anything that would fall in a "social" category I would expect to get via browser or app notifications, if at all.
Anything "promotional" would never make it into my inbox in the first place. Blogs and similar publications are subscribed to and read via RSS.
If a person asks for my email address I ask them to text me.
I use Proton Mail purely as an act of malicious compliance.
Glad we sorted that out.
I think you misunderstood.
I didn't.
It will anything whether it should or not.
It does what it's told, which is the way an OS should work.
It can be made to execute a payload that shouldn't be run.
And Linux can't? Isn't that the whole thing about Linux and open software is that it can be made to do whatever you want?
Of course it does. Everything that's not an iPhone does.
Doubt. Pixels have had the best photos for several years.