It’s a shame because the TINIEST amount of web searching would’ve brought them DRM playback and video accelerated Firefox. It’s not a 1-to-1 experience like a ThinkPad running Linux but I think anyone using Linux as a daily pretty much knows there’s some things you gotta dig for.
"Availability varies depending on region. To start, Maps on the web is available only in English. Maps on the web will be available for additional browsers, platforms, and languages soon."
There’s some merit to this imo. Sure you COULD run vintage games with UTM, but we all know what we’re really gonna use it for. Curious if someone were to try this with DOSBox if they’d get the same reaction.
iCloud Keychain would be my daily driver if it let me do multiple domains per entry. Some websites (like school accounts) have a bunch of different domains that use the same central authority for authentication. So it’s one login for multiple domains.
For today, sure. For 5 years down the line, probably would be a different story...
Also note that he's probably not using a Chromium-based browser for his "web browsing" experience... base Safari does fine with 8GB, even with a large amount of open tabs.
This doesn’t even go into the meat of it. To ensure smooth migration, Apple basically simulated the migration across a bunch of its devices and collected diagnostic data. And in collecting diagnostic data, checked for issues/addressed them so when it was go time, the risk was near-0. Now that’s engineering.
So I can only give a recent example of pinsyscalls(2), which associate a system call to a specific memory address to prevent return-to-libc attacks. It's subtle system/OS stuff that make it secure. You throw that out the window installing third party apps though... OpenBSD is best served pure if security is your main angle.