• @JayleneSlide
    link
    159 months ago

    Yes, someone please come free us! I am being held hostage by Windows and Autodesk Inventor.

    • @raspberriesareyummy
      link
      89 months ago

      It’s the usual problem: if your employer IT refuses to budge, you get locked into a Windows (or Apple) ecosystem. I had the same. My solution was to remove myself from corporate IT, and use my own device.

      I use workarounds for the interfaces with corporate:

      • MS Teams Linux client (sadly discontinued as of 2022) still works out of a jail, but the browser solution is also tested and ready as backup should I be forced
      • Webmail instead of a proper mail proram - that’s a big trade-off, but I can work with it, as much as it sucks
      • Webex for conferencing (as it works properly with Firefox, contrary to many other solutions)
      • Web portals continue to work - even though sometimes I need a user agent switcher to pretend I am using chrome (fuck you @MS Teams)
      • I'm Hiding 🇦🇺
        link
        fedilink
        19 months ago

        I take it webmail is due to Exchange-based mail?

        The €10 I pay a year for Exquilla is worth its weight in gold. It’s about the only thing on my system that’s not FOSS, but I’m not even mad because it works. 9.5/10 would recommend.

      • @Ziglin
        link
        19 months ago

        There’s mail apps for Linux. I think thunderbird is most popular.

        • @raspberriesareyummy
          link
          29 months ago

          My point was about corporate IT refusing to provide a mail server to the outside world.

          • @Ziglin
            link
            19 months ago

            So no IMAP/POP3 server or what do you mean? If so how does the web app work?

            • @raspberriesareyummy
              link
              19 months ago

              Webapp probably uses Exchange services internally and exposes only a web interface to the internet

              • @Ziglin
                link
                1
                edit-2
                9 months ago

                Ah, I suppose that makes sense.

                • @raspberriesareyummy
                  link
                  19 months ago

                  In the end, web front-ends always allow to expose selected parts of any kind of internal (potentially insecure) protocols to the internet through a demilitarized zone that only allows https protocol.

                  It’s like being allowed to watch the data you are interested in through a glass window, but no touching :)