qBittorrent, for its search engine. It’s fantastic. If it didn’t have it though I’d use Transmission.
qBittorrent, for its search engine. It’s fantastic. If it didn’t have it though I’d use Transmission.
Almost always software issues. Of course with the cheap ones I got when I was young weren’t great when they were new. The one I remember being underwhelming was the Oneplus 6T, which I bought new. It was great for the first year, then it started crashing, lagging under fairly normal use. Funnily enough the performance was fine in games, normal usage was the problem. It also had a tendency to turn itself off at random.
I’ve had my iPhone longer than I had the Oneplus and it runs just as well today as it did when I bought it.
Glad to hear you’ve had a good experience with long term use. I’d love to stick to android but from personal experience they just don’t last when I get a hold of them.
And this is why I didn’t fully believe it when people were saying Red Hats antics wouldn’t affect Fedora upstream.
What alternatives are there to Fedora that offer a similar balance of stability and regular releases?
Windows 11. I’d love to switch to Linux but I have a few edge cases that keep me from doing that right now. I made the mistake of buying Forza Horizon 5 on the Windows store instead of steam. I know I can move my save over to the steam version and rebuy it, but I got the premium version and have no idea what DLC I need to buy again when I look at the store page. And I have an oculus quest which I use with Oculus Link to play PCVR games. There’s ALVR to do it on Linux, but compared to link it’s not going to cut it for me. Once I have a new VR headset (AKA when valve replaces the Index) and Forza horizon 6 is out/5 is EOL I’m more than happy to make the jump.
Every android phone I’ve owned has crapped out by the 2 year mark, and that’s even when not using custom ROMs or rooting. IMO iPhones are more reliable and provide a more consistent UX. They also offer a better baseline level of privacy. (Granted, you can’t beat GrapheneOS and the like on android)
As others say, Bitwarden checks all of those boxes, and KeepassXC technically doesn’t fit the “not self hosted” requirement, but you can store your database file in any cloud storage you want.