Just be aware of distrowatch rankings, they're sorted by visits to the site, impressions and etc, and don't necessarily reflect how much a distro is really widely used.
As others have said, if your device doesn't have a Nvidia card, go with Linux Mint. If you do have a Nvidia card Fedora (maybe not the default GNOME version, as GNOME's workflow required some time to get used to) or openSUSE might be better options.
If you're okay with a distro installer asking a few more questions than the basic ones, and you don't need super updated stuff, you can also try Debian.
And then people don't like to hear that at this point Europe are just a bunch of vassal estates to the USA. They could have fought against it and become more independent, but didn't and now it's too late.
The trend of one shitty corporation attempting some PR bullshit and market-taking after the previous shitty corporation makes a really idiotic move doesn't stop with Meta going for Twitter's throat, doesn't it?
Oracle trying to spin up some moral high ground over RedHat is hysterically bad. They'd do better staying quiet.
Will of adhere to the ActivePub standard and play nice in not trying to push it around to suit their needs alone?
Will it be honest about how much and which data they collect, and give users control on how much they want to share?
Are they good about not forcing their users on an unknowable algorithm?
There's too many factors to decide on a whim. Not all companies are wholly evil like Meta, Microsoft and Elon's enterprises, but they're all for-profit, and we must always be wary. I'm willing to give Tumblr's owner the benefit of the doubt for now.
Billionaires can spend and burn their whole net worth for all I care. Datasets should be either:
Paid for to the provider platform, and each original content creator gets a share (eg. The platform keeps 10% of the sold price for hosting costs, the 90% remaining are distributed to content creators according to size and quality of the data provided)
Consciously donated by the content creators (eg: an OPT-IN term in the platform about donating agreed upon data for non-profit research), but the dataset must never be sold for or used for profit. Publicly available research purposes only.
Dataset is "rented" by the users and platform in an OPT-IN manner, and they receive royalties/payments for each purchase/usage of the dataset.
The current manner things are done only favours venture capitalists (wage thieves), shareholders (also wage thieves) and billionaire C-suits (wage thieves as well).
Also works fine and is better than inlining it all. I'm just more used to ending the lines with the symbols - instead of starting the next line with them like your example - because it's the same parttern I use for other stuff, like (curly) brackets.
VC backed AI makers and billionaire-ran corporations should definitely pay for the data they use to train their models. The common user should definitely check the licences of the data they use as well.
I pass. Gamifying social interactions leads to abuse and lowers the quality of posts, comments, reports, etc. It's a streamlined path to enshittification.
Now that I've looked it up, apparently you do need to install one. I've looked up the settings menu where there's one virtual keyboard already installed for me, but couldn't find any toggle for it.
Searching for "virtual keyboard" on the Discover store yielded me some results. I'd try it here if my laptop had touch screen, but it doesn't. You could try "CoreKeyboard" or "Virtual Keyboard Toggle".
Agreed, since I mostly watch stuff on my not-4K laptop or my not-4K phone.
For people who like to watch stuff on huge 4K screens and stuff, they'll require higher quality videos, but as long as everyone has their needs meet I'm more than fine.
We need not only to have the kids of today to learn digital literacy and privacy rights, but also their parents. I'm really low-profile about my personal life, and I like that my family is also like that.
Just be aware of distrowatch rankings, they're sorted by visits to the site, impressions and etc, and don't necessarily reflect how much a distro is really widely used.
As others have said, if your device doesn't have a Nvidia card, go with Linux Mint. If you do have a Nvidia card Fedora (maybe not the default GNOME version, as GNOME's workflow required some time to get used to) or openSUSE might be better options.
If you're okay with a distro installer asking a few more questions than the basic ones, and you don't need super updated stuff, you can also try Debian.