If there was a word for "genius" but for being a good person instead of smart, she would be that.
dillekant
Overall the issue is that they're not a "like" technology for ICE cars. The transition won't happen without regulation. In Norway the vast majority of new car sales are EVs. China too has basically moved straight to EV infrastructure rather than ICE. It can be done but the government has got to do the job. In countries where they are unwilling to, this isn't going to work.
The olive oil is an example.
I'd like to fix climate change instead?
Honestly I think walking in with a friendly way to explain climate science to a layperson is a bad strategy with politicians. They should come with full technical details and use precise scientific terms. Expect politicians to learn that shit if they want to argue.
Seen this in olive oil prices. It's already happening.
Idiots don't realise that hurricanes are controlled from Australia, from pine gap.
I keep mine in an ever growing wishlist, which I never get back to, but it stops me from feeling like I forgot anything.
I've given up. I'm going to just keep adding to wishlist and nibble on a new one every now and then.
No, it's another company, but I know nothing about them.
This is fine. I don't mind a diversity of opinion here. I agree that Proton is a stop-gap solution, and that most older games are going to need it, and newer AAA games are not going to support Linux all of a sudden.
However, I do think that we should continue to encourage developers to create native builds when they can. Indie devs tend to do this and it's a pretty great experience. Not only that, it often enables playing on unusual devices such as SBCs. For example, UFO 50 was made in Gamemaker, which offers native Linux builds, and it's already on Portmaster. You basically can't do that with Proton.
My problem is calling people who want Linux native games misguided or wrong. I really don't think that's helpful.
I think there's definitely an element of "the people in charge know what to do", or that it's a transient problem, not one which locks us into effort for centuries.