Additionally:
- a ton of ISO downloads, ARM and RISC-V support
- Local AI integration for detecting images, searching through docs, finding stuff and writing emails.
- Wayland support.
- A new UI which is a mix of MacOS, Windows 11 and KDE Plasma.
- Atomic updates.
- A new containerized package format (linglong) competing with Flatpak, with some improvements over it.
but not every OS collects and transfers user data to its vendor like the very good American MacOS and Windows do.
This is very true; that’s just plain Capitalism, and the government takes advantage of that through simply asking for the data.
It’s a great reason to never use MS or Apple software.
I’m stuck on Android, which is no better, at least until someone sells a phone that is reasonably usable as a reliably daily driver. So, I assume everything going through my phone is surveilled. It’s the price I pay for not wanting to limit myself to a dumb phone; a minimalist phone that will allowed me to use a P2P encrypted chat client would be sufficient; I’d even accept Signal, although I’m not a fan. But phones like the Light Phone are just too dumb, and none provide any sort of encrypted chat. Linux based phones (or, a phone-oriented Linux distro) are almost there, though, and I’m ready to jump when one gets a decent review.