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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
byQbertino ( 265505 ) writes:
The things holding back Linux for the unwashed masses have diminished to minor annoyances in the last 15 years, especially when compared to the nonsense wintel still puts its users through. It finally has gotten through to ords that there are solid reasons why experts don't even consider Windows as an option when doing mission critical stuff these days. ChromeOS and Android are signs of the things to come and Windows isn't even on the radar with those usage patterns.
Looks like linux has finally gotten criti
bykarmawarrior ( 311177 ) writes:
Look very carefully and I'm seeing a pull-back from ChromeOS/Office 365 type models as people start to re-evaluate whether they want their files managed by third parties who increasingly demonstrate they don't have the power to provide the product they're advertising. When a United Nations official can have their own account shut down because the US government is run by a man not afraid to lash out in response to his own grudges (https://www.heise.de/en/news/Criminal-Court-Microsoft-s-email-block-a-wake-up-call-for-digital-sovereignty-10387383.html) it's a wake-up call that tells you maybe businesses - at minimum - should be managing their own core infrastructure.
I used to be happy encouraging people to use these tools, but Google was once relatively trustworthy, and there was no apparent reason to think Microsoft's bad behavior would extend beyond price rises, adding features people don't want and taking features away people do want, and file format shenanigans. I would not recommend anything like that any more. There are free open source self-hosted replacements for virtually everything right now that give you the same advantages as the cloud stuff with none of the disadvantages. And as entire governments move over to that (as they are), that's going to trickle down to normal users like you and I.
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