It's not all about usability. Some people care about having community-controlled software instead of company-controlled software.
The problem is that many people expect the hardware to be supported. I don't know why, but there is empirical proof they do.
Two things being compatible with each other is a symmetric relation, so the order doesn't matter.
It's not all about usability. Some people care about having community-controlled software instead of company-controlled software.
The problem is that many people expect the hardware to be supported. I don't know why, but there is empirical proof they do.
Two things being compatible with each other is a symmetric relation, so the order doesn't matter.