I didn't buy one because I am not sure how well the module system works with regards to converting USB-C to HDMI/DP/etc.
In all of my past experience, converting USB to graphics resulted in one problem or another. It's too much complexity for my taste. Am I wrong about how this laptop works though?
USB-C port can have DisplayPort AltMode support: transferring DP data through an appropriate USB-C cable. I believe the similar holds for HDMI (up to 1.4b).
Considering other commenters are saying how the port is likely TB4 without certification, those should be natively supported too.
Everything that you can do with Hooks can be done with Class components though. Of course Class components also have a lifecycle that is managed by React. But the existence of a managed lifecycle does not make it a framework either.
The article you linked has the answer:
> has it established ways of doing things that are mutually-exclusive with other ways those things might be done?
The answer here is a solid No in the case of React. Nothing is mutually exclusive, because you choose to use Hooks in one component, a Class in another and you can still use React.createElement elsewhere and straight HTML with vanilla JS even somewhere else.
Dorian Abbot has his own account of the situation. One of the document he links is a dozen different MIT associates and alumni tweeting in support for the talk to be cancelled.
> I forgive the activists who led the campaign against me. Please do not attack them personally. They are fish swimming in a sea of moral confusion. Some of the responsibility for their behavior rests on their elders, who have not helped them form properly.
There are definitely more than just white males here because just about every topic specific to some country or region gets comments from people in that area and I doubt they're all white.
People of color around the world have opinions about race, gender, etc which I think would offend you. Some of their countries even have laws, language and cultural traditions that are completely against your own values.
Also, perhaps it's very difficult to avoid becoming reddit when controversial topics are present? Which comment forum do you think gets it right and what's their secret?
This is a good list of concerns to be aware of, but I think they need deeper inspection and should be balanced by comparison with the list of concerns about Firefox and Mozilla from bejelentkezni who you replied to. I think what it really comes down to is that every single one of them, including Firefox, has it's issues and you just have to pick your poison.
For Chrome, you can disable linking browser sign ins to web page sign ins and you can disable FLOC. For mobile - If you don't trust Google, you should probably be on an iPhone IMO. There I use Adguard with Safari and that works just as well as uBlock Origin and better than Firefox on iOS.
I use Chrome all day on desktop systems, but I don't sign in at all and because of that, I just don't do syncing. If I really wanted to do basic bookmark syncing though, I could do that with an extension like xBrowserSync, EverSync, etc. (or even my own). Of course those probably wouldn't sync to iPhone/Safari with some hackey procedure. I don't know if Manifest v3 will stop uBlock Origin because the maintainers have been steadily working on ways to implement the extension with it.
I don't entirely distrust Brave since they've been quick to apologize, explain and/or revert their mistaken behavior. I think they deserve some consideration for the level of innovation they're trying to achieve. For now, Brave is my backup plan for desktop at least, if Manifest v3 breaks everything completely.
Good for me that I pack lightly and I can move to another browser easily or use a mix of them if I wish to.
> For mobile - If you don't trust Google, you should probably be on an iPhone IMO
I'm sympathetic to that argument, but ultimately until Apple supports sideloading more generally, (which is likely never), that lack of control of my device outweighs my concerns with Google's privacy practices.
I've yet to see evidence of them siphoning off DNS queries for tracking or MITMing my queries to DDG to find out what I'm searching, but for Chrome everything you type in the address bar gets sent to google search for search suggestions.
If they did start doing so, I could switch to LineageOS or even Plasma Mobile, as my phone supports changing the OS without having to exploit a security vulnerability.
Which to be fair, the default in Firefox is the address bar gets sent to the search engine provider of your choice for search suggestions, but you can change the search engine and/or disable that in Firefox for Android, unlike Android Chrome. And on desktop you can separate the search and address bars still.
Yeah, I was just thinking about every other app that you might use on the phone.
If you only use a web browser then that's perfect for you. I am a fairly minimalist user and I generally prefer the browser over phone apps but I still use too many apps to list here easily.
In all of my past experience, converting USB to graphics resulted in one problem or another. It's too much complexity for my taste. Am I wrong about how this laptop works though?