Full of trash and your life is better off without it? Checks out.
Full of trash and your life is better off without it? Checks out.
Not just Windows sys admins … I have this access to MacBooks, tablets, and phones in my company.
Windows, MacOS, Linux, iOS, Android … If it’s in use in an enterprise environment that knows what they’re doing, they have full access to the device.
This has been my first struggle with Wayland. Used to be able to enable remote desktop with a single check box in most distros, then VNC into it from a Windows PC no problem. It’s a real hassle now and glitchy at best once it’s up and going. I gave up and have been using Anydesk to remote access a machine, and even that wasn’t simple to get going.
I forgot about Atoms. I was going by “desktop” CPUs, of which the last Pentium 4 was released in 2002.
The last 32bit Atoms were from 2011, so still pretty outdated and wouldn’t really be usable for a daily use machine.
I get what you say that they can’t afford to be tossing out old equipment … But there hasn’t been a x86 based 32bit PC made in over 20 years. Are you really trying to find an OS for systems that old or is this just a thought experiment?
It means that just because something doesn’t get attacked as often, doesn’t mean that’s it’s invulnerable.
Or rather that people treat something as if it’s invulnerable because they haven’t experienced an attack.
Security through obscurity.
It’s the same nonsense we used to hear about Macs not getting malware.
Galaxy Tab A9 has 4gb for under $150.