vdo.ninja?
i_am_not_a_robot
The start menu being React Native is irrelevant. If it were React in an Edge web view that would be a different story.
Opening the start menu should cause a spike in CPU usage. You want the CPU to open the menu ASAP instead of dragging out the process so the CPU usage is more flat.
But everything in Windows these days is wasting time stealing your data, loading ads or other unnecessary data from cloud services, and interacting with "AI." Performance is one of the lowest priorities, somewhere between software quality and privacy. Since mid Windows 10, Microsoft consistently replaces things with modernized, but worse, versions and never returns to finish making the new version as good as the previous version that evolved over decades. It's a really expensive way to ruin a product. They could make a React Native start menu where people wouldn't complain about the performance. They probably did and people are only noticing now because of a recent regression.
A less intrusive solution would be to just put your sensitive data in LUKS and configure services that use that data to depend on the partition being mounted. That doesn't require modifying the normal system startup process. You're less likely to mess up your startup process at the expense of needing to be more mindful about where you're putting your files.
Tang and Clevis have already been mentioned as a way for one server to boot using another server.
You can also create an environment where the server boots into a phase 1 where it obtains network connectivity and then waits for you to provide it the key to continue booting. The first phase is unencrypted, so don't put sensitive data in there.
I'm less hopeful. People would just switch to the formatting tab and use that. Most people center text on a title page by repeatedly hitting the enter key to go down and then the space key to go right and then they get to the next page by pressing the enter key until they get to the first line of the next page like they're using a typewritter.
In Markdown and HTML and TeX and even Microsoft Word you're supposed to just use the Heading 1 style option instead of manually changing the style of the paragraph text. There are times when you don't want to use Word, most commonly because you're managing your documents as text files in a source code management system or because you're an LLM and you're incapable of anything besides Unicode text, and it has some limitations that make it unsuitable for typesetting, but it's not bad for word processing, and the file types aren't that terrible to work with anymore. People just don't know how to use it.
Until a few years ago, it was common for Android devices to stop receiving features after about 1 year and then stop receiving security updates after 2 years. Unless you're getting security updates another way, which may not work correctly and may even require you to build Android yourself, you should not use the device for anything important after that point. The batteries would be next to useless by that time. Now it seems more common to get three years, which isn't great either. iPhones last longer, but they come with all the iPhone problems.