I didn't know this, and am disappointed.
Here's a different view of the same study: https://www.npr.org/2023/07/27/1190383104/new-study-shows-just-how-facebooks-algorithm-shapes-conservative-and-liberal-bub
Real time breaking news has an extremely low signal-to-noise ratio. It's mostly FUD and mis or dis information.
Amtrak is supposed to have a window of right-of-way. Freight companies ignore it in a combination of ways.
Canonical isn't exactly clean from controversy, and Ubuntu is a rather opinionated distribution. I appreciate how RedHat contributes upstream as much as possible, and how vanilla Fedora is. In my opinion, that makes for a better user experience.
Are you familiar with Fedora Silverblue or Universal Blue? It's, in some ways, a halfway point between nix and Fedora. Another way to put it is that it builds on existing paradigms to create a declarative system based on Fedora.
I think Facebook killed forums. With rare exception, they're all a ghost town. I'm excited about the idea of the fediverse, and the threadiverse specifically, bringing back forums. I think we should work toward that goal.
This is very cool because a lot of online forums were completely gutted when Facebook took over, and seeing communities adopt the fediverse is awesome.
Plasma's scalable applications paradigm has been around for coming up on 15 years. Gnome's isn't far behind.
I'm unfamiliar with this one. Can you cite a source?