Technically there's no substitute for testing in production lol
Although ideally you'd want to test it beforehand...
Technically there's no substitute for testing in production lol
Although ideally you'd want to test it beforehand...
Less power/increased liability for corporations.
IMO 16, if you can trust them to be responsible enough to drive you can trust them to have a smartphone. If you can't trust them to drive then yeah they probably shouldn't have a smartphone lol
I wouldn't work at those companies, but I wouldn't say the developers who work there are quite as evil as the directors at those companies. It's true they were just doing their job, like they were just following orders, but people do need to work at the end of the day. Whether they work there for prestige, or for the pay, and sure you could argue nobody needs that pay, we have already seen people who stick their necks out at those companies get their heads chopped off. Not everyone who works there is going to be fine with (or worse, happy with) how evil the companies are, but also not everyone there is going to stick their neck out either. In summary, I don't think it's fair to blame the developers who work there. I once worked at a mid-sized advertising company, they hid that they were an advertising company and at that point it was too late.
Besides, not everyone has enough experience that they can quit their job at the drop of a hat, especially in this pro-business layoff-heavy economy.
You can generally install Linux on any computer you want, entirely for free. You don't need to buy a new computer, you just install it like any other operating system.
Also there's often live USB environments where you can boot from the USB but try it out before dedicating to installing it on your SSD/hard drive. You could technically even dual boot but that can have its own problems.
As always, back up your data when trying out things.
For basic things like web browsing, watching videos, and reading emails, Linux is excellent. It's when you start getting into more power-user type stuff where you have to learn more about how things work on Linux.
if anything is preventing people from switching it’s Linux users, and probably developers as well. if you make it look like people have to have a degree to get into your shit, they’re not gonna do it.
The thing is, I agree with you, and unfortunately it's actually a common misconception how difficult Linux is to use. You can easily install a beginner-friendly distro like Ubuntu/Mint/PopOS and get started that way, it doesn't have to be daunting. It's free to try out and you have nothing to lose by giving it a try, you could always go back to Windows.
I got lucky that my last 3 jobs have all let me use Linux on a work laptop, but I guess it's not too surprising since I work as a web developer and production always runs on Linux lol
We would need all peasants doing it at once. One peasant doing it just means you get your head cut off, which unfortunately doesn't help.
I can't imagine that they won't be removing it eventually though.
It will never understand context and business rules and things of that nature to the same extent that actual devs do.
I can understand both sides and I've been on both sides. Wanting to donate to show appreciation and help support an awesome project, and not accepting donations due to creating the burden of unfair support/development expectations for a volunteer project.
It really is such a cool extension.
As someone with a strong tech background, that's just impressive to me. It's cool to see non-technical people are interested in self-hosting too, and for good reason.