accounts exist so content is tied to a person, not to persist the content itself. you follow people, not posts. knowing who's active in the community still matters even when what they said yesterday is gone. anonymous ephemeral content tends to invite spam and abuse, accounts add just enough accountability without permanence.
Linux can fool you into that sense of security for a long time. But there will come a point where the facade crashes down.
Maybe it's plugging your laptop into an external projector, or getting to sleep and wake correctly without the WiFi driver segfaulting, or maybe it's trying to get HDR working, or audio routing or...
Or not. I've been using Linux since 2006, initially for fun and giggles, and then by choice, and nowadays it's without a doubt the superior alternative. My successive employers forcing me through Windows gave me the "privilege" of daily-driving Windows at work and seeing up-close everything that Microsoft has produced since XP. That show-stopping 15min drivers installation because you plugged-in some headset or mouse? That's Windows-only. That screen positioning that can't be remembered consistently between work and office? Ditto. That nefarious hours-long unskippable OS-upgrade? Same. That feeling of losing your mind because you configured something in a specific way and now it's gone? Oh yeah, that's Windows overriding your user-preferences behind your back, just because. Your playlist blasting in the open space? Apparently that's a Windows feature of your bluetooth headphones switching off (even when they were not playing because your playlist was paused). That wifi that you have to re-enter the credentials once a month or so? Yeah, Windows suspend/resume once again crapped and that somehow caused network amnesia. And that's just the hardware-ish stuff. The permanent nagging, upselling, silly distractions, adverts and overall lack of polish and stability is nothing new in software-land.
I cannot remember when I last had a network, bluetooth, audio or driver issue with Linux on my ThinkPad. I legitimately cannot. But I can assure you I that had 3 of those in the last couple weeks alone on my work's HP elitebook with W11 24H2.
> Linux can fool you into that sense of security for a long time. But there will come a point where the facade crashes down.
All my laptops through multiple jobs have been running Linux starting in 1994 (way before the "Year of the Linux desktop") with zero problems. I switched to Mac laptops in 2012 only because that's what work at the time gave me. In later years accumulated many Mac laptops but quality has been goind down fast. Next time around I'm back to Linux because can't take it anymore.
These days, the problem with Linux is more the quality of the laptop hardware, which is substantially worse than that of a Mac laptop. The Linux software itself is stable, although drivers can occasionally hiccup. Perhaps desktops are fine. Mac laptop + Linux (with good drivers) would be heaven.
I don't think it is technical. Because of their size, they would be hard to hold without covering portions of the screen, if the bezels were thinner. As is, my fat fingers get in the way already.
I don’t know. Certified Unix? There might be, but it would certainly be a small picking. This is the list of UNIX certified products: https://www.opengroup.org/openbrand/register/.
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