English has the peculiarity of having two variants of the same word: "gender" and "genre" with slightly different meanings.
You could lean on it and go with genre. But just changing the word is unlikely to help much, the concept itself is deeply associated with genitalia in English culture, you'd still need to explain it.
Feel free to say it any way you like, it makes no difference:
- 1.58 meters
- 158 centimeters
- 1 meter 58 centimeters
It's all the exact same thing, nobody will bat an eye.
Nothing will change in that sense.
There is already support for retroachievents, if you don't see it you're most likely on the stable branch.
Retroachievents only work on the dev builds, which are available on flatpak-beta. The readme has some instructions in case you need them.
You may want to look into gnome classic, it comes default with gnome.
It's not fancy or even popular, but it was made specifically for people like you.
It's way worse.
With bsd you could at least take the code you got and make your own fork, with these shared source licenses you get nothing.
Regardless of what the website says, waydroid isn't an emulator by any meaningful definition.
It's a container that runs on top of your regular linux kernel (with some very cool desktop integration features), java/kotlin applications run as natively as they'd run on your phone.
I felt the same way about webp when it came out.
In practice it doesn't really matter:
- if you're encoding the file you know how you're doing it.
- if you're receiving the file, you get the pixels you get no matter how it was encoded.
- if you're sending the image through some third party service, they're going to reencode and mangle it anyway so there's no point in worrying.
Also, it turned out that even if it's quite good, lossless webp is rarely seen in the wild because svg is more convenient.
Heif is covered by patents in the mpegla patent pool of which apple is a member. They have a vested interest in it becoming mainstream.
It would depend on whether you think elop was a Microsoft mole al along 😉.
By the time of the Microsoft acquisition, focus had already shifted to Windows phones.
No, the tape is an endless loop, the end is the same as the beginning.