True. I wondered the same for the canaries. But they did mention why they didn't want to go with the 100% rollout option.
> We could set some very important machines to only get updates when packages reach 100% and stop being phased updates, but Ubuntu has a good record of not blowing things up with eg OpenSSH updates.
I occassionally use the Notion Android app - and you can feel the difference in the native interface and the webview in this case. But only due to the interactivity - appearance is similar and cohesive.
My experience wasn't good before the introduction of the native home tab - I experienced high loading times right on opening the app and degraded usability - which made me quit from that page most of the time. Opening a page from the home tab now still has delay associated and the transition is not yet seamless (for me - I get a blank screen and then the page starts to load). But the home tab helps significantly improve the overall experience as the initial wait time is no longer present. Like mentioned the experience is improving - and I'm looking forward to the beta with more native interfaces!
True - but since the tool is strictly opt-in only, are we a bit too critical of the tool? Personally I don't use any such av tools or have any stakes in cryptocurrencies. But in a way they are providing an option for less tech savvy people to mine cryptocurrency right? Would've been better if the crypto component was not installed by default, but still. As many mentioned, there's also the question of the education component to the users - how much good a job the tool does in providing proper awareness to people who go opt-in to the tool, on what they're getting into. Personally if I were to use such a tool, I'd prefer that.
I think what is wrong is telling people they will earn cash while the electricity bill will make so that only Norton will get money instead. All this while increasing global warming and energy waste.
It may be opt-in but there is just nothing good in it.