They have a near-monopoly on the desktop market. The average consumer doesn't care about bloat, and will keep using Windows stubbornly no matter what. Why bother writing good software if people will buy it anyway?
Signal is fine for normal/social chatting. It is centralised which makes it much harder to obscure identifying conversation metadata, and I wouldn't recommend it for comms with a state threat model. I like SimpleX for addressing those issues.
If you just want to chat to friends and nothing else, I probably would recommend Signal for the most polished experience and most widely adopted open-source private messenger.
And I've installed apps with adb install file.apk, your point?
Pretty sure they meant a smartphone with a desktop OS installed on it (eg Linux phones), not just "phone that looks kinda like a laptop but still uses Android"
Conversations move through different topics.
The origin of inefficiency as resistance comes from people in concentration camps deliberately doing poor jobs at forced labour as a form of resistance. If you're posting on Lemmy right now you can do a lot more than inefficiency. The people who had to resort to inefficient slave labour as resistance could only dream of what you can do.
I've scanned a book with my phone and uploaded to Z-Library before when it was a book I couldn't find online at all. Not a great quality pdf, but as someone who wanted to read the book for research and ended up having to buy a paper copy, I would've still preferred that pdf to nothing; it was still perfectly readable.
Like another commenter said, to get a good-quality pdf you'd have to take the spine off. Also note that it is really time-consuming and tedious to scan a book by hand (I assume there are machines that can automate it, but normal people don't have those). Big respect to people who do it regularly, but you may not want to be one of those people.
Anna's doesn't take uploads. They just redistribute files uploaded to other platforms.
You don't need to be so euphemistic. If you're just downloading, piracy is not really investigated rigorously anywhere. Just using a VPN is sufficient. You can talk openly about it too.
That's a pretty misleading headline. The news article is about a cool art installation, in which an artist has used a deceased composer's DNA to produce electrical signals that are interpreted as music. Still cool, but it's not "composing music" in the same sense as the alive musician was composing music.
Jerk your buddy off for him since he can't do that right now
Worth considering that there's less of a need for backwards-compatibility with Linux binaries because most Linux software is open-source, so they can be recompiled or updated for modern Linux by the end user if the maintainer is gone. A lot of legacy Windows software is still in use and the source is unavailable, so Windows has to support it for the businesses that use the legacy software. In other words, it's a cultural difference too. Linux seems pretty good at supporting things users actually use, like old hardware.
Not disagreeing with you btw, just my thoughts on why that difference exists.