The lady doth protest too much it seems
while(true){💩};
The lady doth protest too much it seems
The same is true of iPhones
I’d say going directly to a developer’s github page for packages isnt too bad, especially now with all of the security features github has in the background, but yea technically true.
Obtainium but for Debian, nice
I have two company laptops. One lives at home. BYOD computers are still a bad idea.
If it helps, the web versions of O365 have been closing in fairly rapidly on their desktop counterparts to the point that I often find myself working in the web version without realizing it (usually when I open an attachment in Outlook or a Teams shared link). The preview of the new desktop version of Outlook is 99% the same as the web version now.
I don’t know if its possible or not but you might be able to “install” them to your desktop as progressive web apps.
I saw a good post the other day which suggested to NOT migrate (at first) but instead try to find as many cross-platform apps as possible and use them on your current setup until migrating over would be relatively pain-free. Learn the free applications before switching to the free OS.
Why is work not providing a laptop to you? Making/allowing you do work on a BYOD is insanity from a security perspective. I hope your company doesn’t have to go through PCI compliance audits or do any kind of transactions with the general public’s credit cards…
To be clear: what I wrote here is not a linux user’s opinion, but rather someone who works infosec for a Windows-based organization.
With that being said, you can use O365 apps through the browser just fine as long as you work out of your OneDrive or your team’s SharePoint storage exclusively. You can even use Outlook/Exchange through O365.
But if you can, I’d push for a company laptop even if you stick with your Macs. Mixing personal devices with work is a baaaaad idea for both parties.
Additionally make it illegal to buy residential property if you do not spend more than 70% of your time living in the US (including travel) and must be a US citizen or US-headquartered company (with eminant domain type laws to reclaim the property if the company or citizen moves out of the country)
We’ve had this on KDE for a year or two now, and it’s mostly been great.
It won’t mean no more blurry apps unfortunately, but games will render at the correct resolution and some xwayland apps will look a lot better.
Check the timestamps on those posts
EEE…
I wonder how hard it would be to port the linux driver to windows
How much do you think de-googled GrapheneOS with FLOSS-only apps would help?
Fun fact: NieR:Automata is the sole reason DXVK (a huge source of Proton’s performance) exists. The avatar for it on github (or its developer) is fanart of 2B
This probably meets some extreme corporate usecase where they are serving millions of customers.
Oh. Im on KDE and it runs great there. I think you could probably port the game to use libadwaita as a fork if you wanted
Third party launchers are the LAST thing we need, and would provide no benefit that the game itself doesn’t already provide.
Minecraft needs launchers because of the lack of built-in mod support and the fact that its closed source. Minetest is the opposite of these things.
My point is you are grossly oversimplifying software and how hard it is to actually write something like an office clone
It’d be great if they implemented the same identity encryption/obfuscation that Signal uses but for the IPs.