

The article says he worked from China, for US and European companies. Which explains both the pay difference and the concern about the sanctions.
The article says he worked from China, for US and European companies. Which explains both the pay difference and the concern about the sanctions.
There’s an uptick in ‘Unknown’ (currently at 26%).
Linux adoption might have slowed down because India - US relations have improved since then, because Trump can be distracted by promising him trade deals. Of course the deal he wants (giving US agri companies access to the Indian market) will face opposition from farmers’ unions, so I’m not sure what the govt’s long-term plan is.
One good thing is that when a govt dept switches to Linux, it sort of sticks. And govt contracts are very profitable, so we’ll likely see greater interest from both hardware and software companies.
9% in India. But this is down from a peak of ~15% late last year when the govt was worried about US sanctions and was pushing for Linux adoption.
The rules for transport of batteries are based on the size of the cell rather than the size of the battery package in total.
That sounds like an obvious loophole?
I don’t get it. 3900mAh battery and 25 charging is not okay for a flagship costing over 1 lakh. If the aim is to make a light phone, why not use a weaker SoC and make it cheaper as well? This is neither here nor there. Who even is the target audience?
Look man I like Xiaomi but their UI is a meme.
Android is supposed to be a (mostly) open-source OS. Users shouldn’t have to worry about Google.
This looks horrible.
Definitely ask your principal for a recommendation.
Dust can also block connections. I remember a 64 GB RAM system becoming 128 GB when it was cleaned (two sticks; one was clogged).
Mint also gets rid of Snaps.
Teh kidz r al rite.
Schools in India already use Ubuntu. To be fair we benefit from having some local manufacturing assembling. There’s usually no security beyond whatever linux offers by default.
Will my ability to play games be significantly affected compared to Windows?
Depends on the game. In general no, unless it has kernel anticheat, which Linux will not allow because that’s a glaring security risk.
Can I mod games as freely and as easily as I do on Windows?
Yes.
If a program has no Linux version, is it unusable, or are there workarounds?
Most Windows software can be run on Linux using Wine. But there are advantages to using Linux-specific alternatives - they are often lighter and faster.
How do OS updates work in Linux? Is there a “Linux Update” program like what Windows has?
Yes, each distribution has its own update tool. They also install and update software (like in Android, where Google Play installs and updates all apps and not just the OS). No need to download exe files from random websites.
How does digital security work on Linux? Is it more vulnerable due to being open source? Is there integrated antivirus software, or will I have to source that myself?
Linux is generally much more secure than Windows, because it is open-source. Most internet servers and supercomputers use Linux partly because of its security.
Are GPU drivers reliable on Linux?
Nvidia is notoriously bad but getting better. AMD is good.
Can Linux (in the case of a misconfiguration or serious failure) potentially damage hardware?
No.
And also, what distro might be best for me?
Linux Mint. It is stable, reasonably up to date and does not make confusing changes every update. It also tends to work on most systems.
Short answer: off
Long answer: If you won’t use your system for gaming (or anything requiring third-party drivers) and trust Microsoft to not fuck up and will also encrypt your disc, then Secure Boot makes you safer. Otherwise it just causes trouble.
Their laptops were running Windows / Linux, and this article is saying that while they initially planned to shift to HarmonyOS Next, they are now likely to stay with Linux.
Also, while HarmonyOS Next is proprietary, the kernel (Hongmeng, a microkernel optimised for arm64 and with a Linux compatibility layer) and large parts of the underlying code (OpenHarmony) are open-source. Sort of like Android and AOSP. The ‘optimised for arm64’ thing might be why they are sticking with Linux - the laptops mostly use Intel x86 chips.
Debian already has an ARM version. Do you mean some Qualcomm drivers are missing? There are already Ubuntu ROMs for Android phones, so this shouldn’t be an issue, right?
It messes up object arrangement. This is technically Microsoft’s fault, but that doesn’t help when you want to communicate clearly with a MS Office user.
Didn’t they get a lot of computer hardware from Russia recently?