If you like Kubuntu because of apt and KDE, don’t be afraid of going Debian with KDE next time.
If you like Kubuntu because of apt and KDE, don’t be afraid of going Debian with KDE next time.
I love everything about Pop!_OS. Except the name, that I cannot stand.
Hey, poison has it’s uses too, unlike Teams.
This is the story of a Johnny Rotten.
His vote is a drop in the bucket anyway
We are all just drops in the bucket on this blessed day.
A music app like Spotify founded by Jay-Z
Really? That’s not how I remembered it, I just thought he bought the existing service Wimp and rebranded it. Kudos to Jay-Z if he actually made a music streaming app though.
Does it count if the secondary “server” is a NAS?
Interesting, how would that work if your corporate IT department uses an (Azure/Entra) active directory system? Can you use a bare metal Linux OS on a Microsoft-based domain service? Asking out of ignorance and curiosity.
As an engineer, all my jobs so far have used niche internal corporate software which would only be available for Windows. This would be Document Management Systems (DMS’s), internal reporting tools (progress and hour keeping), software distribution programs etc.
And of course the engineering tools themselves are often only built for Windows, whether it’s proprietary PLC programming environments or CAD software.
That said, I can run both WSL and a corporate-approved Debian VM on the same work laptop as a compromise, for whatever makes sense for the task. Still sucks though! At home I’m a Debian fanboy 4 lyfe.
Help, I’m 5 years in and still have no clue
Depending on your country, that is the norm. Engineers here have at least 2 national unions to choose from, finance have a couple of unions, same with teachers, admin staff, etc. etc.
As usual, this is probably just US being victim of 'merican exceptionlism.
That’s my experience too, unfortunately. LibreOffice is lagging too far behind O365 on features that you can reliably cooperate on spreadsheets across applications. Something like e.g. XLOOKUP is a fairly recent addition in Calc.