Yes. It's a rare system that it shouldn't be enabled.
RAM is a precious resource. It's highly likely programs will allocate RAM that won't be used for days at a time. For example, if you are using docker once the containers are started the management daemon does nothing. If you have ssh enabled only for maintenance it unlikely to be used for days if not weeks on end. If your system starts gettys they are unlikely to be used, ever. The bulk of the init system probably isn't used once the system is started.
All those things belong in swap. The RAM they occupied can be used as disk cache. Extra disk cache will speed up things you are doing now. Notice this means most of the posts here are wrong - just having swap actually gives you a speed boost.
One argument here is that disabling swap provides you an early warning system you need more RAM. That's true, but there is a saner option. Swap is only a problem if the memory stored there is being used frequently. How do you monitor that? You look at reads from swap. If the steady state of the system is showing no reads from swap, you aren't using what's there, so it can't possibly have a negative speed impact. But if swap is being used and isn't being read from, it's freed some RAM so it is having a positive speed impact.
One final observation: the metric "swap should be twice the size of RAM" isn't so helpful nowadays. There aren't a lot of programs that sit around doing nothing. Maybe 1GB or so, and it's more or less fixed regardless of what the system is doing. Old systems didn't have 2GB of RAM, so the "twice RAM" rule made sense. But now a laptop might have 16GB. If you are using 32GB of swap and not reading from it would be a very, very unusual setup. If you are reading from that 32GB or swap, you're system is RAM starved and will be dog slow. You need to add RAM until those reads drop to 0.
Could be used to trigger a verification workflow in the event certain municipalities start requiring it.
How would it form? Why doesn't it collapse inwards? Why does it weigh so much?
I mean, sure, it could be an ancient alien ship with a superdense unobtainium shell to have exactly the same gravity as a rock ball but why would they park it so close that they need to cover it in regolith?
Then again some people think a virus is somehow caused by radio waves and active remote-controlled microchips can be suspended in clear liquid so the whole world must be like wandering through Wonderland all the time. There are no rules and anything can happen.
What about Chrome? And Chromebooks?