Do I need a foldable phone? No. Do I like the idea of owning a phone that is actually small enough to be used with one hand and can fit anywhere? Yes. Besides, closing it to end a call is very cool.
Do I need a foldable phone? No. Do I like the idea of owning a phone that is actually small enough to be used with one hand and can fit anywhere? Yes. Besides, closing it to end a call is very cool.
Why not? It’s not like Huawei can just use Android so I doubt they’ll pull the plug on this system anytime soon.
It’s about time we got a major third player in the mobile OS space. Godspeed to Huawei, may they succeed where Microsoft failed.
Yeah, I doubt most people will go this route. VPNs cost money, Twitter alternatives are free.
It’s a shame that’s not the default because while do find EVs interesting there’s no way I’m buying a car that may stop working after a failed software update. Did early EV manufacturers feel the need to put as many bleeding edge features as possible in their vehicles to make them more alluring? Cause I can’t imagine another reason to turn a car into a driveable smartphone.
It’s in the fracking ship!!
Can current Windows even work with 2GB of RAM?
The original OpenOffice is no longer in development. LibreOffice is an active fork of that.
Ooh boy, do I have some good news for you!
It’s from Steam’s 2023 Year in Review. It shows up at the top of the store page when you open their app.
Smartphones are so big nowadays I’d be down to using a flip phone instead, if only they weren’t still so damn expensive. I like that form factor and the foldable screen technology seems pretty mature by now. Also, closing the phone to end a call will never not be cool.
The Lemmy devs have no power over instances they do not run themselves.
It seems to me they’re saying Lemmy needs corporate backing to grow? Cause if they were so bothered by the opinions of the Lemmy devs they could simply use Kbin instead.
You mean this one?
What do you mean it isn’t popular? I was under the impression that KDE was roughly as used as GNOME, maybe a little less since it’s not the default in as many distros. As for why current GNOME is popular, my guess it’s mostly momentum (since GNOME was already popular) but it being a very clean and polished desktop probably helps as well.
It’s a tropical country with great food, welcoming people and beautiful landscapes, so I can imagine a few reasons why. The laws and proneness to natural disasters are less than ideal, though.
This is Tumbleweed erasure, it should have an icon next to Fedora
My friend down the street had an LX back in '83. It was an amazing device but sadly way too ahead of its time.