Who’d use Chrome anyway?
Thought to have been an ordinary falling star.
Who’d use Chrome anyway?
“Can’t you just do it on paper?”
Makes sense. Cheers!
Fair enough. I got one because it was the cheapest domain… though reading some of the other replies, I probably shouldn’t try to do anything like email with it!
That’s the second time I’ve seen someone cast xyz in a negative light. What’s wrong with it? (Genuine question, in case it needs saying)
if I get an idea I am not happy until it start making money
That sounds extremely unsustainable
MicroOS is designed as a server OS first and foremost, but I have read some anecdotes of people using it just fine on the desktop.
You might want to look into OpenSUSE Aeon or Kalpa instead, which are immutable editions designed for the desktop, running GNOME and KDE respectively. Kalpa is in alpha (almost rhymed) but Aeon is in a more mature state.
Might be worth trying to find a refurbished HP ProLiant MicroServer. There are a few on eBay UK within the £200-400 range. You can sometimes find professionally refurbished units as well.
Why not? It would help massively with the ‘affordable’ criterion
At the risk of seeming to throw shade; why use Brave at all if you’re going to switch off all its unique features?
Would an alias solve this?
I tend to use objects in space. My media server is called phobos, and my AzuraCast server is called dorado.
They’re a bit meaningless, though, so when I do my planned server upgrade this year I’m going to go with something different. My pfSense server was called sibyl, so perhaps something along those lines.
By that logic, nothing is reliable…? Because you could say that about literally anything
Sounds alright to me… Might have to go to https://cheese.town afterwards, though.
I reported a SharePoint bug to Microsoft yesterday afternoon, and it was fixed by the time I logged in this morning.
Y’know, this conversation doesn’t seem to be going anywhere, so I will leave it here: if it’s such an easy sell, every business in the world would have done it by now.
What happens when you need to collaborate with other businesses who use O365? The business would also have to spend time updating any legacy documents, templates, spreadsheets and so on. Then you have the IT teams, who will need extensive training so that they can field the inevitable flurry of support tickets and calls. And that’s not getting into the support side of things - who do I go to if something breaks in LibreOffice?
I am an advocate for OSS, but there is a bigger picture here, and unfortunately it’s not always as simple as just switching over. I wish it was, believe me!
…I managed to do the same too, just trying to scroll up on a question, and despite having read both these comments.
Starting to think it’s a ‘them’ problem