Who the heck knows lol
Incompetent the whole lot really
Who the heck knows lol
Incompetent the whole lot really
I definitely have no skin in the game here, but wow just skimming some of the discussion topics, it sounds like a small group of people want to monopolize a fairly easy to vocalize domain for a very specific purpose of power-modding it rather than any sincere attempt at being an all-encompassing community.
Kind of like how some people are moderators / owners for some 30-40 communities on popular instances and flooding some of them with submissions as if all they do for a day job is to do that under the guise of “sharing content” while giving little to no room for anything to stick long enough to garner discussion (I don’t know about the next person, but the “content” is the discussion, not the shared link).
These people are not leaders nor are they effective community managers. Rather they want to monopolize the community to serve a particular motive, and are leveraging the fact they’ve become “landed gentry” to shape a community that fits their wishes, rather than one spun together by the engagement of its members.
Think it’s funny that the lemmynsfw instance is having its own internal mutiny. tl;dr - ex-admin reported the server to their host prompting a server migrate
I really appreciate the article flagging both Microsoft and Apple but really only devoting a single paragraph speculating on what Apple might do:
These are all third party offerings (some perhaps in partnership with Apple), not a direct Apple product. At least as far as I can tell, Apple hasn’t had a significant push towards making a core part of their desktop computing experience a cloud-based experience. A comparison would be between Keynote versus Powerpoint, with the former still an actual application shipped with macOS whereas the latter is now primarily offered through the Office365 subscription cloud based service and a separate purchase needed for a dedicated software application.
Between WindowsCloudBookOS, macOS, and Linux, I reckon a lot of people would rather settle with macOS once WindowsCloudBookOS is required rather than work with Linux, in so far as Apple’s product offerings remain compelling versus scouring the internet for figuring out what pre-built hardware plays nicely with Linux.
Now with that said, Microsoft’s cloud push is increasingly frustrating. LibreOffice and de-Googling / de-Microsofting would be such a great goal, and supporting efforts like Valve’s on SteamDeck and SteamOS to further enhance and build out the tools to allow games to run on Linux will increase reach.
Fundamentally though, MS in particular will remain the vendor of choice for most large institutions due to institutional momentum, which moves glacially slow, and it’s very hard to transition the day-to-day people using MS tools to something comparable. I don’t see many institutions mandating a switch to Linux client-side, and depending on institutional requirements the “thin client” approach solves some headache (e.g. particularly private or sensitive data may be better accessed using a thin client through a VPN to minimize the ability for the data to leave premises).