• 3 Posts
  • 57 Comments
Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: March 15th, 2025

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  • Just FYI - SCCM is not the Autopilot equivalent, it’s the Intune equivalent. Intune’s Autopilot is, kind of, what Task Sequence is in SCCM.

    As far as “life support” goes - it’s full featured. Security updates are still coming in, not much else they can add feature-wise in there.

    As for the cloud - everything has its uses. Cloud is great if you don’t want to deal with all the bare-metal stuff. It allows one person to do the work of four, with the trade-off being that you lose some of the fine-tuning, control, or optimisation. As the saying goes: “the ‘s’ in 'Intune” stands for ‘speed’".

    Don’t fuck the cloud. Just use it when it’s better than on-prem.


  • I love Linux. I’m running Linux and love the experience.

    But…

    i7-4970 i7-4790 so running windows 10 with all its bloat was not going to be an easy task for em

    What in the world are you talking about, man??

    Even ignoring the silliness of the “bloat” - i7-4790 eats Win10 alive and asks for seconds.

    I stated that as long as they dont know how to work with wine/lutris or know any specific linux packages that run windows games on linux they should not be able to play in the middle of lessons

    So… No, you didn’t stop them from doing that. All it takes for them to get back to playing games is to google “linux roblox how to” and 20 minutes later they’re good to go. Windows has AppLocker, and GPO to prevent running unwanted software - have you researched alternatives for Linux?

    does this mean linux now is ready for the education sector?

    Well, depends on scale. The setup you did is fine for, what, a single classroom? Two classrooms? It’s completely unusable for a larger school - for that you need an MDM solution, ideally with some form of IAM. In the Windows world that’s SCCM/Intune with AD/EID (local/cloud). Correct me if I’m wrong, but there’s only bare-bones equivalents in the Linux world for that, which would be the bigger a problem the larger a school you’d be dealing with.








  • In general, I’d suggest being a bit more curious and playing around with stuff

    Man, I’m 40, my 9-5 job is being curious, testing and retesting stuff. When I’m home, I just want to play some games…

    Like you said you didn’t understand the options for OpenRGB and it sounds like you didn’t try installing it at all to eliminate it as an option before posting

    Yeah. I’ve learned (through curiosity and testing, btw) that it’s super easy to break stuff in Linux, so I was a bit weary of installing third party software that does “something” to control the LEDs on a graphics card.

    I did test it out yesterday, though. Sadly, does not recognise the GPU. It did recognise my mouse, though, which is neat.

    It’s not like an app like OpenRGB is going to break your GPU or anything.

    That’s the thing - I’m in a state where stuff works and is fine. That came after five reinstalls and three distros. Linux is not Windows - it’s fairly easy to do some unrecoverable* damage if you don’t know what you’re doing.

    * yes, I know, technically everything is recoverable, but that requires knowledge and time, neither of which I have for this kind of stuff.