What games do you play? I've been gaming exclusively on Linux since Windows 7 went EoS, and especially since the Steam Deck came out, I've had very few problems. That said I don't play competitive stuff, which is what tends to have anti-cheat rootkits.
boatswain
I'm curious if this applies to rooted devices with a hardened OS like Graphene installed.
If you just bring s whole other person in your checked bags, you save on ticket costs, too.
I've got a Lansky kit I've been using for years; it does the job pretty well: https://www.lansky.com/sharpeners.html?page=1
What's the financial plan there? Or do you just want them to drop 80% of their budget or whatever it is and work for free?
I was on System 76 for two laptops. The most recent one, a Lemur, started to fall apart: the plastic hinge just started coming off in chunks, and the clamshell began to split. Customer service was terrible: they tried to get me to agree to charges without explaining what they were going to charge me for. When I pressed them (which took repeated emails) they finally admitted they wanted to send me a part for me to do a replacement without any instructions, and which they advised people not to do. Very scammy vibes. I picked up a Framework instead and have been really enjoying it, though I can't really speak to the gaming portion I'm afraid. I'd just say avoid System 76.
The problem is that it really has to be addressed at the national level. Otherwise, places with better social services and less extreme weather (like the big cities on the west coast) get overwhelmed by more transient homeless than their systems can handle--and that's even without Texas or whoever shipping busloads more in..
Anyone who starts off telling you that they're the most popular and trusted should probably not, in fact, be trusted. Especially if they're calling for not using password managers. Passkeys are interesting in theory, but my understanding is that most of the implementations are just another way for big tech to track you.
As another poster detailed, this is not a company that exposed your info: these credentials are all from stealer logs, which are logs of credentials stolen by keyloggers installed on machines. If your credentials were in this report, it means that you've entered that username and password on a machine with malware on it. Could be your personal machine, or it could be some other computer you've used.
It's also about control of the Northwest Passage IMO; that's why he's interested in Canada and Greenland.