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linux

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0konomiyaki , in Linux in the corporate space

We use Ubuntu at my work. Custom built image PXE booted so every restart is fresh. Has its pros and cons. Libre office does a decent job at replacing Office but we use Google workspace so most users are moving off local files. 90% of our users work could be done entirely through a Web browser so OS doesn’t really matter as much any more.

Siegfried , in Terminal Utility Mega list!

No love for cmus and links2?

Steamymoomilk OP ,

thanks for the suggestion! they have been added to the list.

SrTobi , in TIL that operating system Linux is an example of anarcho-communism

Isn’t Linux more like a benevolent dictatorship. At least the kernel development.

al177 , (edited ) in Linux in the corporate space

25 years ago I worked at a university computer lab that was Windows-heavy because Dell wouldn’t stop donating PCs. However we didn’t have enough UNIX workstations as we had to pay for Sun / HP / IBM out of pocket. Converting them to Linux workstations would be nice because the Dells had more grunt than the aging RISC workstations.

I proposed to switch a few desks worth to Debian and was given the go-ahead. After a few days learning how to preseed an installation image and getting a PXE server going I had 8 machines running CDE just like the AIX and HP/UX boxes. Users that didn’t need one of the commercial engineering applications tied to one OS or another didn’t notice any difference between the free (now as in both speech and beer) Dells and the proprietary workstations.

A couple of months after we got the pilot rolling, the university’s IT director came to check it out and told me we’re on the “lunatic fringe” for deploying an OS developed by volunteers, but otherwise offered approval as long as we could maintain security and availability.

Now every student in our local school district gets issued a Chromebook running Linux under the hood. Who’s the lunatic now?

WeLoveCastingSpellz , in Writing Docs with Kate - Fedora Magazine

I hate that I can’t copy things out of kate, it shows up blank on my clipbboard

tubbadu ,

uh this is unfortunate, I can copy paste flawlessly on Wayland and I remember i could also on xorg a few months ago

fossphi ,

That’s interesting. I use wayland on my personal setup and xorg at work and I can copy paste flawlessly. Do you have klipper enabled?

WeLoveCastingSpellz ,

idk what klipper is 🤷. if it is the fefault clipbosrd manager it is in my system tray yes

fossphi ,

Yes, that’s exactly what it is. Most of my problems with clipboard on plasma were due to a misconfigured clipboard manager. Does this happen only on Kate or other applications, too?

WeLoveCastingSpellz ,

only kate

Pantherina , in How do you use your tiling window manager?

Kwin: meta+left, meta+right, meta+screenup

Thats it. For the rest I use a taskbar and buttons

tanakian , in Linux in the corporate space

companies that do IC design, do it under linux. traditionally they were using proprietary unixes, but today it is mostly linux and redhat or compatible systems.

engineers are using rhel workstations from dell and hp that are supported by vendors to work under linux: let’s say bios updates are possible to run from within linux.

their whole workflow depends on unix with many custom scripts (shell, perl, tcl) and simulations, usage of shared filesystems, and even x forwarding.

afaik IT departments in such companies aren’t happy to support linux workstations and the trend is to move the workflew to linux servers and let the engineers to connect to those via ssh, vnc or x or commercial solutions like ‘citrix’.

my understanding is also that companies design some requirrments, though maybe based on what is available on the market, and love to have support and solutions that are integrated with each other. microsoft still has everybody hooked up, their ‘active directory’ feels to IT people necessary, they also use microsoft’s disk encryption, and/or third party windows software which encrypts everything written to usb flash drives to prevent leakage of what they call ‘intellectual property’.

it is of course possible to do luks encryption of linux disk drives, but afaik rhel doesn’t support it, or rhel versions these companies tend to use, since they tend to use very outdated systems, even eol unsupported systems, because ‘customers still use those’.

i am also not aware of linux versions of those draconian services that encrypt everything that gets written to the flash drives, or that monitor/control computer usage, web requests, etc, so companies are interested to concentrate unix systems in data centers and get rid of linux end user workstations because these require custom approaches or draconian control software is not available, while windows users can be controlled better, with available corporate solutions.

socphoenix , in Old ass chromebook distro recommendation [request]

I’m running arch on my Chromebook I followed the wiki for WiFi then ran the arch install command and set up xfce4. That worked with xbacklight and hot keys setup. I needed a script from mrchromebox to get the speakers working as well but everything else worked out of the box.

Nimrod OP ,

I’ll be honest, I’m a bit scared of Arch, but this might be the push I need to give it a go. What’s the worst that happens?

Can you add trackpad gestures to Arch?

socphoenix ,

I honestly haven’t tried, but I have seen this gesture support in the AUR

socphoenix ,

I had to use the script twice because I did something stupid the first time but honestly the worst case is you try again!

liliumstar ,

Second Arch. I’m running it on my EOL chromebook with coreboot now. Everything works as intended.

halm ,
@halm@leminal.space avatar

If you want a little bit of hand holding to ease you into Arch, Endeavour OS is a pretty smooth distro that makes the install and configuration easier.

Nimrod OP ,

Interesting! Looks pretty slick. Might be a nice stepping stone into that world. This chromebook is so old that it could be a perfect playground for this sorta thing. I don’t have any important files/apps or anything on it that I’m afraid of damaging or being without. Thanks for the suggestion.

vojel , in Linux in the corporate space
@vojel@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

The next job offer I will accept needs to have free choice of OS. I work with Linux systems and Kubernetes only, no Winshit but I am forced to use this shitty piece of crap of software. It is slow,buggy and clumsy as hell - maybe because of all the corporate software stuff and GPOs, the only office tools I need are outlook and teams, no word or excel but you cannot remove all the other stuff afaik. Updating is hell because it is controlled by our IT department, sometimes my laptop needs 3 restarts or is stuck in a boot loop. Just let me support myself and let me install some Linux flavor. Don’t need any support from corporate it besides vpn connection. Really fuck companies forcing *nix guys using windows. I know that for sure now. Never again.

GustavoM , in How do you use your tiling window manager?
@GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

Eh.

Alt + F4 to close running commands

Alt + enter for full screen

Alt + (arrow key) to switch between windows

Alt + p to run bemenu

thats it

stsquad , in How do you use your tiling window manager?

I have an binding for my terminal, my Emacs and a general fuzzy selector for apps or SSH hosts. I generally operate with everything full screen with windows sorted across 10 named workspaces across 3 monitors.

Sway config: raw.githubusercontent.com/stsquad/…/config

rufus , in Linux in the corporate space

Depends. Lots of universities have Linux and Windows computers.

Most companies use Windows, some also Mac and Linux.

I’m alwasys fascinated by IT people who manage a fleet of Linux servers and containers, but sit in front of a Windows PC. 😃

Pantherina , (edited ) in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

Opposite.

Fedora with KDE is a Pain, and GNOME is simply underpowered a lot.

Installing GrapheneOS or programming a microcontroller just didnt work. I have no idea of udev rules and these things should work better. (Tbh I will try to fix the packages)

Also processes crashing just often freeze my entire everything. No seperation, no ctrl+alt+del task manager which nearly always works. The task manager is a normal app, and it just doesnt start if the desktop is down.

Virt-manager has not enough RAM? Yeah, Plasma crashes and I need a hard reboot. Yay.

Meanwhile Windows sucks, but it works. Also it is better for

  • collaborative normie documents
  • office: easy presentations (again, collaboration), excel: easy graphs with a UI that makes sense
  • arcgis: qgis is better on surface, but all the underground transformation tools are so messed up.

Many things in Uni make me get insane on Linux. Being the only one literally learning another program, while learning a bit of that proprietary license garbage too, is burnout and I will probably fail in the “recognize this button in arcGis and explain how to do x” exam.

Titou ,

used to do collaborative works on Linux, never had any issues

mariusafa , in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

I’m done both with windows and people that develope software that’s only compatible with windows. Kind of c# shitters.

rush , in Screenshot tool for GNOME + Wayland

it lacks Wayland support.

It lacks wayland support in the sense that the UI won’t run on Wayland. It can take screenshots on Wayland.

mypasswordis1234 OP ,
@mypasswordis1234@lemmy.world avatar

Okay, so the vending machine works, but the buttons do nothing. Brilliant!

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