It's mostly used for gaming, but it's more like a souped up vnc with hardware acceleration support and low latency. I mostly use it to access my desktop remotely instead of for gaming. You can tune it between low latency or high quality depending on your use case.
Being a successful politician in China may allow you to control large companies. Being a successful businessman in US may allow you to control political parties. I guess the endgame is the same for powerful people in both countries.
If you have a smart tv or chromecast ultra, you can install moonlight directly in your tv. If you're still using a computer for the tv, at the very least using moonlight won't make your client computer's fan spins like crazy. You can even replace it with a low power computer like a raspberry pi.
Living in a place with earthquakes is also suck. You could be fast asleep and suddenly awaken by the shakes and had to evacuate out of the house within seconds. Doubly so if it's on a shore because you may need to evacuate the area if the quake is large enough to potentially trigger a tsunami. I wonder when we finally have an earthquake version of tornado warning.
Not if it's what you want, but I had success with moonlight+sunshine. Latency is unnoticeable and picture quality is great as long as the connection between the client and server is good
Now that I think about it, the decline of ubuntu began when they inserted amazon affiliate links in their ui a long time ago. The final straw for me is forcing snaps when attempting to install some apps via apt. I replaced all my ubuntu machines with debian without any issue.
I think every programmer should know how to write frontend and backend code, and how to deploy their code. Sure, everyone has their own specialization and things they like to do, but that doesn't mean they should be ignorant of all aspects of software development.
Maybe try emailing the dev asking to add support for RAZR+. Some devs actually respond to requests on emails. The dev probably doesn't have that phone, so if they do respond, they might ask your help debugging the issue. Again, not all devs do this so don't get your hopes up, but I've seen some devs actually do this.
When a dev abandon a live service game, I hope they do what Marvel's Avengers did: patch the game to work offline, unlock all paid contents, then has one final big discount before shutting everything off.
When reddit fuck up again, the alternatives are already pretty mature, at least compared to last year. Back then the only app we have was jerboa (and it was pretty shitty back then too, unlike now). Now we have gazillion of lemmy apps that can suit everyone taste.
FBI would arrest jellyfin devs so fast before they can hit the release button.