

It wasn’t “half the internet unusable”.
Everything behind the same AWS and Google IPs which is a lot.
I live in Russia
So you pay taxes to Putin. Good to know who actually helps funding the regime.
It wasn’t “half the internet unusable”.
Everything behind the same AWS and Google IPs which is a lot.
I live in Russia
So you pay taxes to Putin. Good to know who actually helps funding the regime.
Telegram is not banned in Ukraine either. There also are no Ukrainian sections against the founder.
I also did not call him a fighter against the regime. You have a vivid imagination.
Russia tried blocking Telegram once but Telegram relies on AWS and Google Cloud, so the blocking attempt backfired, leading to half the internet unusable in Russia, leading to quick back paddling by the Kremlin.
Since Telegram is not banned in either country, it’s the best source for unfiltered news from the front.
Intel tried with OpenAPI because ROCm was not invented here.
I‘m saying whatever the server asks the client, a client can choose to hide the UI elements. Nothing more, nothing less.
Because its competitors care about Not Invented Here instead of building common industry standards.
Grok UI elements and number of GIFs in the picker are 100% local features clients can choose to ignore.
Definitively certain and I didn’t call anyone an angel, so no idea why bring such a thing up.
Telegram founder fled Putin.
That’s not how the GPL works. Any such agreements would be voluntary.
The beauty of open source is that there will be 3rd party clients that don’t care about all of that.
Anyone putting corporate technology into their bodies is just asking to get Black Mirror’ed.
Pace makers aren’t made my anticapitalist cooperatives, you know.
It still doesn’t do anything to steer me toward a Switch 2 over a Steam Deck
Who’s claiming that giving away your Deck is a necessity?
Is it? Or did they choose Arch because of the ease of setting it up with all the latest software the community was already packaging?
That’s an illogical either or question because it’s both. Valve moved from Debian to Arch because of its more recent upstream packages, yes, but Valve’s upstream contributions in turn made Arch (and the other distributions) better for gaming.
Wenn der verliert, bleibt er doch sicher auch noch zusätzlich auf den Prozesskosten sitzen, oder?