Surely the defacto standard for desktop linux is ubuntu?
As true as this may be, I wish it wasn't. Because running a desktop is different from running a server.
Try convincing a dev that he can't just do this or install that in an enterprise environment, like he is used to on his vm or desktop.
I've seen too much stuff break or be incompliant with security policies: wrecking authentication methods, not understanding sudo, installing unnecessary packages (the tutorial said I needed to install iptables, nevermind that the distro is using UFW), installing out-of-date packages by pinning an already ancient java version, keeping up-to-date with patches/releases or just plain installing a DHCP server (OK, those are thrown off the network pretty quickly). And if you try to reason with them or explain why they shouldn't do this they get their manager involved just to get their way. And often a security exception is drafted and approved with a little help from said management.
Don't get me wrong, I don't mind working with someone who wants to do stuff right and I'll do everything to help him or her getting to a compliant install. But usually they'll just tell us off and only come to us after they built everything and won't budge because of the endless commitment / sunk cost fallacy.
People from both sides checking the people counting the votes
That's also solved in most countries, where there is a broader political spectrum than 2.1 (I'm being gracious with the
Finalists will be invited to an expert consultation in October.
I expect a full Japanese delegation on the München Oktoberfest.
b.) ensure any prospective employers clearly know what sort of a whack job they're looking at.
Yeah like what you see with management types, they can run a {team|business unit|company} in the ground and they never get another job!
/sarcasm off
Teams integrates with enterprise authentication, embeds office suite etc. It's calls, calendaring, messaging, files, wikis, notes etc all in 1 place. It goes nothing like you described.
IBM Notes did that too in the late 90's / early 00's, only better (if set up and maintained by a decent admin).
And for me the interface just doesn't work. I find it cluttered (like someone else mentioned, multiple search boxes below each other doing different stuff depending on context). A lot of stuff you need is hidden, stuff you don't need is in plain sight, and there is no way to customize it. It eats resources like you wouldn't believe and the performance is still sluggish.
If you believe mass murder doesnâ(TM)t happen in Europe, youâ(TM)ve got your head in the sand.
Sure it happens, nobody says it doesn't. In 2020 and 2021 on average 7 times a year, so almost once every two months.
If you pull your own head out of the sand you should also look at the statistics for the USA: 2020 614 shootings, 2021 693 shootings. On average almost 2 _a day_. And we have more than double the population (~750m in Europe vs ~330m in the USA).
But feel free to feel safe where you live.
HOLY MACRO!