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I mean; their latest line of cards is plagued with problems, not the least of which is the cards being shipped with less available cores than advertised and different amounts than each other (same card model, different stats, bit of a dice roll as to which you’ll get).
So I’m sure the tariffs are having a bad effect too; but a significant amount of their loss is their own doing.


Ten years ago when I first tried to play a game on Linux, with no experience, I was completely lost. I spent a few hours trying to get anything to run and eventually gave up.
Last year when I fully abandoned Windows and moved to Linux; I installed Steam, clicked play on a game, and it just ran no questions asked.
Since, I’ve run into a few titles that claim incompatibility; but when you enable the forced use of Proton to make it compatible; it fires right up, no problem.
Now, I could likely find and use the various compatibility tools without involving Steam; but this path has required 0 effort, it just works. I haven’t had to install and experiment with several packages and mess with configuration and pull my hair put after hours of failure or any of that. Just click play.


The playlist for that series :)
AFAIK, it’s never made it out to the public unfortunately.
WOW.
I can understand making a mistake in the website design, leaving such a vulnerability; but to shove it under the rug and ghost the people that reported it???
The TSA and DHS are begging for an incident.
Glad Ian Carroll+Sam Curry made the info public. Maybe that’ll be the push needed to actually fix this.


Yo OP, your link is broken…


The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End Is Never The End


?
Does it not turn on Bluetooth before opening that menu?
It does for me.
Bluetooth on: single tap turns it off.
Bluetooth off: single tap turns it on and opens that menu so you can select a device to connect to. (it still connects to the last connected device automatically) From there tapping back or tapping beside it closes it.
Been that way for several years now. (Samsung A54, and A52 prior to this one)
In some regions, Android allows call recording natively. Most regions however, this is not allowed and the native call recording features are not available at all.
This does not follow which regions can legally record, just googles arbitrary layout (which from what I can find isn’t actually published either, please correct me if you find a source). I’m in a region where call recording is legal, however these features are not available natively or via third party apps.


I use the app X-plore file manager to manipulate files on android. One of it’s features is hosting either a http web app, or a plain ftp server to share files to other devices on the local network.
Combine that with a vpn to keep the two devices in the same network and you’ll have self-hosted remote access. I host an OpenVPN server from home to keep my mobile devices within my LAN able to securely access my services and keep them behind pihole for adblocking.


In my experience, the ‘show lockdown option’ is off by default. You have to enable it in settings before you can use it.
Requiring a pin on startup used to be the same, but it’s not even an option anymore, it’s just on.
I was also refering to pin/pattern lock as your password for android, perhaps not the best wording.


I fairly recently setup FolderSync to monitor my pictures folders and sync them to my server via ssh as soon as new images show up. I then set it up to sync everything else on the device on a schedule.
I’m using ssh, but you can sync between any folders through ssh, ftp, smb, dropbox, google drive, and many other cloud services. Local>cloud, cloud>cloud, cloud>local, and even bi-directional.


Not through any of the conventional means.
You’ve gotta find and manually take ownership of all its files then delete them all. You also have to remove it’s updater service first (the same way) or it’ll re-install itself immediately.
Even then, it’ll re-install with system updates.
The only reason it breaks anything is several system services like the general help dialog and news+weather are permanently hard-coded to ignore the default browser setting and use Edge exclusively. There’s no good reason for this.
You might just be overthinking a joke…