- the victim was having a fever, your honor!
"Desktop OS" also counts laptops. Unless people are working from their smartphones, I don't think desktop is collapsing at all.
thankfully it's usually the other way around: the glass is opaque and only transparent with power. So you don't need to worry about an ill-timed power outage.
wait, there's a way out? I bought another pc for nothing
I had premium up until a year ago, but I can't recommend it anymore after their purchase.
Choose open source, people.
KISS. At first I didn't like the lack of multiple home screens, in a way these are replaced by swipe gestures in KISS, but after getting used to them they're much quicker to trigger actions than pressing buttons. It turns out I don't miss multiple home screens that much either.
I tried using Lawnchair, but I missed the "search-first" property of KISS that makes opening apps really quick.
sidebery + custom userChrome.css to make it collapse when the mouse leaves the area.
Cookie Clicker
like drugs... just say no
The only time I saw a data breach changing user behavior was with LastPass scandal last year. Unless it's literally the people's bank account passwords that's at stake, I don't think most would care at all.
I agree, regulation - either enforced by the platform or authorities - may as well be the only way.
it's a social network. Some people do post things related to health and fitness, and it's another gold mine of private data for ad targeting, so from a business perspective it makes sense to have features that integrate Instagram with these health and fitness gadgets.
This list is a summary of the data they may collect. Using these apps don't mean you're handing all this info automatically. Most of these are actually voluntarily shared e.g. when the user connects a fitness app to it; or actively requested e.g. when they make use of location sharing in the in-app chat.
The more in-app functionality a user makes use of, the more data they'll hoard about that user.
possibly never going to happen
Is there a web archive equivalent to github repos? At least for the most popular ones.
I know there are hard copies in Svalbard's seed vault, but they're more for a one-in-thousands-of-years post-apocalyptic scenarios than this.