That Would Be Telling on Nostr: 0xa1baa1baa1baa1ba nprofile1q…86naz A take as of a decade ago trying to use ...
0xa1baa1baa1baa1ba (nprofile…dklr) nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpq5w5xwgp4jy94hc7d5pt6hm7dgeg460csypvu34e7ygcejnw5eupqn86naz (nprofile…6naz) A take as of a decade ago trying to use LibreOffice/maybe it was OpenOffice on trailing the bleeding edge Debian:
Because MS Word doesn't crash when you're trying to edit big documents? Because its collaboration features are much better? (That's based on an even older version of MS Word; I grant both problems might have gotten better, but the first problem was/is a dangerous trap.)
A lot of us use computers to get shit down, not to make political statements.
Unfortunately that means a lot of us have or in times past have had to use Windows and Office to work with other people. That said, I'm happy I now can satisfy all my requirements using Linux (ugh) and LibreOffice.
This trick on its customers and their security requirements, though, should cause a reaction like I gather happened with the Adobe one. But I'd assume bigger given how many more people use Office.
Because MS Word doesn't crash when you're trying to edit big documents? Because its collaboration features are much better? (That's based on an even older version of MS Word; I grant both problems might have gotten better, but the first problem was/is a dangerous trap.)
A lot of us use computers to get shit down, not to make political statements.
Unfortunately that means a lot of us have or in times past have had to use Windows and Office to work with other people. That said, I'm happy I now can satisfy all my requirements using Linux (ugh) and LibreOffice.
This trick on its customers and their security requirements, though, should cause a reaction like I gather happened with the Adobe one. But I'd assume bigger given how many more people use Office.