• Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    18 days ago

    Last time I tried HDR on Windows, that sucked too.

    My Android TV and consoles are about the only devices where it works properly.

    • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      18 days ago

      HDR is available in KDE now, and bluetooth works since like a decade? Sorry, you don’t exist.

      • people_are_cute@lemmy.sdf.org
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        18 days ago

        bluetooth works since like a decade

        Lol no it doesn’t. It’s still entirely at the mercy of the OEM, many of who often don’t bother with Linux support. Acer is the biggest example.

        • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          9 days ago

          I’m sure there is still hardware out there with issues, just like there is hardware that has issues with Windows. What’s your point?

  • kandoh@reddthat.com
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    18 days ago

    What I want from an OS:

    Free, or a one time fee

    Tells the date and time

    Has a folder system that is indexed and easily searched.

    Supports Microsoft Office, Adobe Creative Suite, and Steam.

    That’s it. Genuinely cannot think of any reason I would ever want my computer OS to do anything more than that.

  • NateNate60@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I think most of the complaints are that Microsoft Office doesn’t work. Which is true. The web version of Microsoft Office is honestly kinda terrible.

    And no, people don’t want to use a product that does the same thing as Microsoft Office, they want to use a product called “Microsoft Office”. No, it’s not logical, and doesn’t make any sense at all but it’s how people are.

    • bean@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      I installed a Windows 11 update. Office no longer worked. Office refused to re-install despite trying a huge number of things. It literally refuses to install. Tried their help tool which even does removal of old references in the system. Failed 5 times.

      Tried using the web version for a simple thing. First localization struggle which doesn’t carry across sessions. Excel column formatted to number. Then to currency. Then to general. Autosum shows #Div!0 still. Tried seeing if the AI could help. Have to re-login. (Using Mozilla this whole time btw). After re-login, ai tool says stop using private mode. I’m not…

      Literally trying to do the simplest autosum on about 25 lines and it can’t function.

      Installed LibreOffice. No problem with ‘Excel’.

      I’m really not exaggerating. I saw online a similar issue and the guy had to reinstall the entire OS to get office to work again 🤨

      • asexualchangeling@lemmy.ml
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        18 days ago

        I’m really not exaggerating. I saw online a similar issue and the guy had to reinstall the entire OS to get office to work again

        That’s windows for you, have a major issue? Reinstall the OS. Been using the computer for to long? Reinstall the OS

    • mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      18 days ago

      Micro$oft office is being teached in college for my friend and I, having libreoffice, tried doing the exact same thing in it. Not only everything was possible, but also its more convenient in LibreOffice. There are many annoyances in m$ office like auto formatting which cannot be disabled and auto prediction which fills in the details of next cited person from previous (like hell what, how should two people must have same bio?) and now you have to edit all that out by replacing the autofilled ones. LibreOffice on the other hand has much better UX

      (Talking about Excel vs Calc and also Word vs Writer)

      I mean maybe that specific advanced feature is not in libreoffice, but there are much more good things in it that is worth considering using it.

      • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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        18 days ago

        I use libreoffice and onlyoffice daily for academic works, with a few works published out there. I even use more features than the average office user, and I have to listen to people claiming that they can’t use any of those, because they’re inferior. I even have to listen to people saying that libreoffice isn’t suited for doing any SERIOUS WORK, and I’m like “What? My work isn’t serious?”.

        But tne other user got a point. People want to see the name and the ms office logo. They will reject any alternative just because is isn’t ms office, no matter how good and sufficient they are.

    • SeekPie@lemm.ee
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      18 days ago

      At least one good thing that Google has done is that Docs/Slides work on browsers and (where I live) most people use that now.

      • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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        9 days ago

        Google is not really much better than MS. It still leaves you under the yoke of big tech. “Meet the new boss, the same as the old boss”.

        • Railcar8095@lemm.ee
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          18 days ago

          If the alternative is Microsoft, you’re between a rock and another rock that used to claim not being evil.

          Libreoffice all the way. Most users don’t need more than that.

    • graphene@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      If only libreoffice had an app for mobile platforms…

      Being unable to open the documents I wrote on my computer without using some kind of crappy ad filled third-party app is annoying.

      • dustyData@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Libre Office has a mobile app. The one called LibreOffice viewer is only a file viewer but works perfectly if you only look at documents, it is developed by the same foundation that develops LibreOffice. If you want to edit, Collabora is the name of the app, it is based on LibreOffice and is officially approved by The Document Foundation. It is developed by one of their certified collaborators. Both are available on Android and iOS.

    • SturgiesYrFase@lemmy.ml
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      18 days ago

      The only sense it makes is that M$ hasn’t followed the spec, and so things done in office display fine in say libreOffice, but not the other way around. So if your company is willing to transition, but everyone you deal with outside the company is still on Office, there’s a bit of a communication issue. That’s M$'s biggest strength, homogenous work environments.

      • kbotc@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        Microsoft’s biggest strength is the Active Directory. Linux user and computer management is a huge PITA.

        • Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world
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          18 days ago

          For Linux user management you can just use an LDAP solution like FreeIPA. You can even tailor sudoer rules based on security groups, so like you can allow someone to reboot the server but not actually make configuration changes to system config files and what-not. It’ll also handle CA and PKI with smart card support and of course DNS. It has a web interface as well.

          • kbotc@lemmy.world
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            17 days ago

            I’ve done workstation maintenance in a previous job. Every part of the Linux centralized management was worse than Windows. We did it to support our coworker’s wishes, but SSSD constantly shits the bed, and having to code (config management) to write some pretty simple rules like default printers is super annoying compared to the Active Directory built ins.

            • Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world
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              17 days ago

              I don’t know, I like using Fleet Commander with FreeIPA (where it stores the profile). You just spin up the template VM for whatever like-clients on the network you want to make default profiles for and make the changes, shut it down, checkbox the changes (the configurations and stuff) that you approve and let it apply the profiles across the network. Easier than depending on Puppet or Ansible playbooks IMO.

              I have had issues with SSSD as well though and it had to do with Kerberos tickets but I can’t remember what I did to fix it. We’d have to manually use kinit on each machine when it’d basically fall off the realm. I want to say it was a DNS issue but it was so long ago, I just don’t remember.

              We used to use Centrify for Linux and Solaris and it was easy using Access Manager to basically handle AD users and computers with Active Directory and had some GPO support (you could push config writes with GPOs for example and organize it all via OUs for example) but it would get a little wonky between trusts in the forest sometimes (in regards to zone management in Centrify) and they kept getting more expensive. Maybe they’ve fixed that stuff now but it was really simple to use and you could basically manage a lot through the AD and create group profiles in the Access Manager. I think the last straw was wanting to force us to license the entire suite regardless of whether we were using it or not. Personally, I never liked it because it wouldn’t use SSSD or kclient/nsswitch and if some service tried to join the realm/domain, it’d join using the same computer accounts and basically break the account since Centrify used its own client, so you’d specifically need to join the computer accounts via Centrify as a different name. It wasn’t detrimental or anything – just annoying that it was a problem at all. Also, sometimes the user cache database saved in specific users’ appdata that use Access Manager would corrupt from time to time and you’d need to manually delete it to use Access Manager. I’d hope they fixed that by now too though.

              All and all, I’m not saying Active Directory isn’t an excellent product because it is and I’m not saying that there is a 1:1 solution for Linux but I’m saying it that in my experience it isn’t terrible either with FreeIPA and products you can use with it. I definitely hated other 389 solutions prior to FreeIPA though.

  • graphene@lemm.ee
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    17 days ago

    The biggest problem with Linux (other than the whole “most people give up the second they see a terminal” thing) is software availability, which will hopefully improve as Linux gains market share.