There is a distro specifically made for Apple CPUs.
village604
That was my experience visiting Yellowstone pre-pandemic. The biggest issue in my experience is they tended to not respect lines or barriers.
A ton of them did go to the same high school, which is weird.
That's that pesky capitalism mindset at work.
This gives off the same energy as that infographic on fixing a vaginal prolapse.
Anything that separates you from the ground. Shoes, mattress, tires.
Yeah, and not even in a "that's a thing men did back then" way. Sharing beds wasn't uncommon, but it was usually more like them crashing with you for a few days. He shared a bed with a "roommate" for like 4 years.
The kids doing something wrong doesn't absolve the teacher of wrongdoing. They committed a dick move; she committed a crime.
What she did was neglectful, full stop. She created the situation that allowed a child access to drugs.
Yeah, those suckers were the equivalent of like $2k today.
But even cheap appliances can last years if repaired. Washers and dryers are pretty simple to fix (electric only), and it's cheaper than you might think for common issues. Lid switch replacements, drum rollers, heating elements, sensors, etc. run like a max of $50, and you can always find a YouTube video of someone replacing the part in the exact model you own.
People who want it to last.
That's a large part of why "things aren't built the way they used to," is wrong. People don't want to pay a lot for appliances now, so they get built with cheap parts to meet that price point.
There were cheap garbage appliances in the old days too.
Yup, the whole, "They don't make things the way they used to," thing is part survivorship bias, and part people not understanding that appliances used to be very major purchases.
If you spent the equivalent of what they cost back then, you'll get an appliance that lasts decades.
I'm sure large organizations moving to Linux are also choosing a distro that has paid support. It's probably still cheaper than Microsoft licensing, though.