plasma has wayland support, tons of customizability, better multi monitor support, a great suite of applications including a text editor with lsp support and much more, and in general looks nicer. cinnamon is sort of the bare minimum
plasma has wayland support, tons of customizability, better multi monitor support, a great suite of applications including a text editor with lsp support and much more, and in general looks nicer. cinnamon is sort of the bare minimum
outdated mesa, monitor scaling, cinnamon in general being outdated
most common artificial sweeteners are completely fine
probably not a good idea, you’d have to upgrade quite soon. take a look at centos or rocky Linux instead, they’re both down stream from fedora
ransomware might encrypt your home directory
L take
assuming exponential growth, that’s 34 years until we have replaced all politicians. we will rule the world
RISC-V is currently already being used in MCUs such as the popular ESP32 line. So I’d say it’s looking pretty good for RISC-V. Instruction sets don’t really matter in the end though, it’s just licensing for the producer to deal with. It’s not like you’ll be able to make a CPU or even something on the level of old 8-bit MCUs at home any time soon and RISC-V IC designs are typically proprietary too.
It’s by the fsfe, so mainly targeting the EU.
mesa is outdated by default, not supporting rx 7000 cards unless you use the edge iso.