

I worry about it eating the plastic in our body. Unintended consequences
I worry about it eating the plastic in our body. Unintended consequences
Just have 500 thinkpads and you can avoid security issues all together! A thinkpad for every distro EZEZ
I know about mixing the yellow dots by adding mode. But Erased? Do you have any resources I could learn from?
Do you know anything about printer steganography? That’s what nailed Reality Winner ultimately.
I have been wondering the same thing. It would be useful to have an active docket of the DOJ for all cases against large corporations and how many now lose steam or have the lead attorneys replaced.
I also worry about the whistleblower program. If you are a corporate whistleblower, if the government wins on your tip you get around 15%-ish of the takings. So, whistleblowing on something big enough can net you a few million USD or more. Something else to watch. I assume this will break quickly too under this administration.
I just want to second this comment and chime in with my experiences. (Thanks also for the information on Framework as I’m not familiar and love to learn)
My family primarily uses Thinkpads. We refurbish them for fun (and often give them away to our community). We run Linux easily on almost all our Thinkpads. So far, Linux works very well even on some old machines (as old as 2012 which wouldn’t be what OP is looking for but still worth mentioning).
We try different distros all the time but mostly stick with Fedora and PopOS.
Right now, I am on a refurbished Thinkpad T480s running PopOS. The 7th gen processor is probably too slow for OP but it runs Linux great and it can even handle running a large dwarf fortress through Steam haha. The T480s also has a touchscreen option (and screens can often be swapped out). The T480s screens usually have a hinge where they can lay completely flat (although, I’m not sure if they are pen compatible).
A more recent Thinkpad with a better processor could be an option for OP to consider in addition to the other great suggestions you made. :)
I thought we already proved multiple times that work from home clearly increased productivity across the board and reduced costs for the employ and employer.
The push to go back to an office is more about control. Not in a “I need to get my money out of you and make sure you’re ‘working’” but in a “I would rather spend more money to remind my workers that if they work for me—they are owned.”
It feels more like an issue with worker flexibility than worker productivity. Workers having a life and workers being happy means that they will eventually want other things. And usually those “other things” eventually lead to the owners losing a grip on societal and economic power.
Better to have workers not be people. People are unpredictable and profits need to predictably rise forever.