Talk to the person in charge of the meeting room. Every meeting room should have good ventilation, electricity and water. It's like human rights kind of stuff. :D
Hund
Didn't you talk about getting a new laptop computer?
It always stays in your backpack at home, and your meeting rooms at work don't have electricity?
I don't understand. A laptop computer on standby lasts days on battery?
If I had to regularly use a laptop computer I would charge it every day when I got home. It would just have been part of the daily routine I have when I get back home from work.
How often do you work for 12-14 hours straight without any access to electricity?
If Linux is actually of any interest for you, giving up on it because of a few hours of battery life, feels weird for me. Why not invest in a power bank or make it work some other way.
With that said. You're obviously free to use whatever you want to. I personally can't stand Apple and their incredibly barebones, limited and locked down operating system.
I don't know who this is, but he clearly made some people here upset. :D
The whole post is about him not finding any sensible use for a 1 Gbit Internet connection for himself. He never ever mention any one else.
I really don't understand how this can be offensive for anyone else. Why is he not allowed to have an option about himself?
PS. I do believe that the title is somewhat click-bait though.
There's always Devuan if you want Debian before Debian moved to systemd.
I can also recommend Linux Mint. It's a great general purpose option for both beginners and experienced users.
Helium should be fine. They're, to my understanding, a fork of ungoogled-chromium, and they seem to proxy all calls to Google for you. It shold be a safe enough web browser for 'regular' people who care about their privacy.
It does, and there's nothing you can do about it either, other than, obviously, switching to an alternative web browser.
It won't. Well. Perhaps some distros might see new users/customers when everyone's abandoning Ubuntu.
Paying for software is an exception, not a rule.
And we only have proprietary software because there's greedy people out there that take advantage of people who don't know better.
With that said. I'm not saying that developers shouldn't get paid for what they do. They absolutely should! And a lot of them do, even when the code is free as in free beer and free speech.