What you want is Tailscale. The downside of Tailscale is that you have to connect to a VPN to access your services, the advantage - it is so easy to set up on the server it feels like magic.
When our 7 days to die server is not working or we get some bug we are always joking in my friends group that it "must be a Linux issue" lol. We have checked so often and it always was a problem that had nothing to do with it. To be honest my Windows friends apps have problems with bugs and glitches in their games because the game studios often release their games in a poor state.
Apple has a very straightforward design that is instantly recognizable. People love that, it's the same people who want to have a "great unboxing experience"
They combine hardware and software - it is not Apple vs Android but Apple vs Samsung, Motorola, Sony and whatever; on the mobile and desktop market there is so much crappy hardware. Apple users just buy the BigMac they already know, even if there are much better burgers around
you always never get pure Android, it is bloated by phone manufactures. You have the Samsung app store and the xiaomi app security checker and other bloat.
Apple knows marketing very well, they tricked their customers into thinking apple cares about privacy. If you only have the Google surveillance mother ship as an alternative, they rather choose the product that promises to care about their data
Windows is a huge pile of crap. It is such a frustrating and bad OS that has annoyed people for decades. Yes there is Linux, but it usually does not come preinstalled
apple users join a cult when they buy Apple products. It is very important for people to "be different" or to "be smarter"
by paying a higher price, people have the feeling of buying "premium" (which by itself is a marketing word)
I could go on and on and on. I have never used an apple product in my life and am a Linux FOSS enthusiast by the way. But I think it is pretty east to understand.
I haven't looked into the communities, just linked what was already there. I'd argue someone who will leave Lemmy for seeing an empty community would have left anyway. Like OP, who probably posted and never came back.
As we are already hear, do you mind telling us something about !worldbuilding@lemmy.world ? I and probably others too have no idea what the community is about!
I never heard about those subreddits so it is possible they are too niche. Lemmy is still smaller than reddit, which means there is not as much diversity yet. However you can search for these communities.
but I have no idea if they are active. So be yourself the change you want to see and engage in these communities or create new ones if they are missing!
It is pretty easy. If you are a new account then of course someone needs to review your changes. I sometimes fix some typos or faulty sentences, but never added original content. But I guess you start small and the more small changes you make, the more trust you get.
The GPU is actually NVIDIA! But planning an upgrade to an AMD card soon.