Amateur typesetting enthusiast.
Android strives to be a lightweight OS so it can run on a variety of hardware. The first version of the OS had to squeeze into the T-Mobile G1, with only a measly 256MB of internal storage for Android and all your apps, and ever since then, the idea has been to use as few resources as possible.
Emphasis mine. Now, I know graphics improvements and support for various versions of Android take up a lot of the space used, but gee willikers! It’s amazing to think it began with storage requirements far under a single gigabyte.
Insofern, dass es manchmal dort Antworten auf Fragen gibt, die man nirgendwo anders findet. Also, passiv und nach Bedarf.
Mein Konto ( zum Glück habe ich Lemmy ziemlich schnell gefunden :D ) habe ich zwar nicht gelöscht, weil es mich verärgert, anstelle der besten Antwort deleted mit Kommentaren darunter wie genau das hat bei mir geholfen! zu sehen.
It would be prudent to mention these are Gemini protocol browsers, and don’t support HTTP. Great programs though, I use them too.
Opt-in seems like a reasonable position for this optional feature. Not everyone uses it. I don’t. To turn the question on its head:
Is there a compelling reason to enable it by default?
The comments you highlighted were some of the most bizarre things argued in the whole thread. Apparently copyleft just isn’t permissive enough for some people. Your counters are good!
I can understand giving up on FreeBSD–OpenBSD at least offers to install & configure a graphical environment with a graphical login screen during the installation process, which makes it much easier to get up and running for desktop or laptop use (on supported hardware).