Android's modern gesture navigation is awful. I like gesture navigation on ubuntu touch, sailfish, webos, just about everywhere I've used it except android, but I cannot stand android's. Why does swiping from both sides do the same thing? Why does swiping from the bottom do multiple different things depending on how you swipe? Why does swiping along the bottom to switch apps rearrange them so going back and forth is unpredictable? The old two button semi-gesture navigation was so much better.
turbowafflz
The only other one you can put on that machine is Linux.
Not true, I know first hand OpenBSD works fine (at least on my AMD FW13, but I'm sure it works on the others too) and I'm sure the other BSDs do too. I'm not recommending a new user use those, just pointing out the original statement is wrong.
Dijon and horseradish are the best
You know, I think if I was in this situation I would just wear the shirt inside out
I mean I think anything you do that makes enough money to be worth it is just a job at that point right? Like you could start streaming on twitch or something, but once you start making money from it, it becomes a job.
I feel like mozilla could switch to making all their decisions by flipping a coin and do better than they're doing in recent years
I just use Typst for everything these days, but if you really want a gui thing there's always the web version of google docs and ms office
Is dual booting really that common? Whenever I need to test something on windows I just use a vm
Earlier this year I collected virtually every photo I've ever taken from every device I own and put them on my immich server and it was so worth it. I spend so much time looking at my old stuff now that it's all there. If anything I think having easy access to take and view photos just lets you connect to them more because you can so easily go back to any point in your life
This means you're actually in hong kong currently but don't yet realize it
Anyone can learn to use an office suite on their own in very little time so there's no reason to teach it. Being able to use the command line is a valuable skill that makes you a way better computer user no matter what you're doing and it's one that a lot of people are missing these days. I don't think you can really say you know how to use a computer if you can only use it in the very specific ways someone happens to have made a gui for

Games too:
Scania Truck Driving Simulator: The Game
Like wow thanks I thought it might be the movie