Not really, since I'm the admin π
Not really, since I'm the admin π
Not really, since I'm the admin π
Does anybody know the context for this picture?
Thanks!
I gotta be honest, Microsoft did a great job with the UX of their 365 ecosystem. It's great as a user, but as an administrator or small business it is a nightmare.
But in a large corpo setting, it works really well.
The wider Linux community could learn a lot from it.
Pick One.
I don't know, I think UX has vastly improved since I started using it in 2008 and is still improving every year. It's just all these cloud and communication features we're behind on.
It would be cool to have something P2P, like Syncthing and Tox, integrated into all mainstream distros for sync and communacation Then you have some sort of a single sign-on that connects you to all your devices and people you want to communicate with. Instead of Microsoft login you have a built in pw manager that automatically creates and stores (and syncs) accounts for you and so on.
As a person who went full Linux recently I might be biased.
As someone who has to use office 365 for my university, this is not true it is terrible I avoid it whenever I can
You must not have to help users with their office problems.
Um what? Its one of the worst UIs I've seen and its incredibly buggy and slow.
I find the cmd ux quite good, what would you change ?
As an IT guy, I hate everything about the OneDrive setup. Using it, dealing with users that have to use it, it's a lot.
I like AD and the management interfaces, that's about where Microsoft's Enterprise offerings cease to be helpful to me.
Where are the ads?
Just use Linux (I know its not that simple)
Actually, it kinda is... the mindset is mostly the problem IMO.
From personal experience working in a Microsoft ecosystem, it's mostly a matter of being able to hire the right people.
There is a near-infinite source of IT workers that have some expertise with Microsoft software and services. And those kinds of numbers simply don't exist for the Linux world, especially with all the different configurations out there.
Medium-sized organizations have to employ a strategy of throwing enough idiots at a problem in order to keep things running. This also creates some of the issues they need the idiots for because no one has detailed knowledge of how things work.
My attempts at proposing a linux-based application server have been met with all sorts of "but our domain policy", "we can't guarantee continuity", "none of my people know how to admin this stuff" type responses.
It definitely is a matter of mindset, but there is also a big commitment to make if switching systems to Linux. And that is a choice managers will only make if the benefits are clearly illustrated in a businesscase.
Itβs pretty easy for me to use Linux at work thanks to VMs. But if you want to also avoid using windows or all the other Microsoft 365 stuff, thatβs more difficult.
Michaelsoft Binbows vibes. π€£
everytime
Parse error: no such fucking word
Do you get upset everytime you see it?
Is that Torvalds?
I doubt it, that would be too much of a coincidence to have two people named Torvalds in one picture.
Haha, you goofy goofball
You don't know? He is Torvalds Tsubasa long lost Japanese cousin of his.