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In this video I am going over Linux in business. Many don’t understand how Linux is used in Business and I am about to demystify that!

-Virtualization (https://xcp-ng.org/)
-Web Hosting
-Telephony
-Networking (pfSense and the like)
-File Sharing (Typically connected to MS Active Directory) .

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20 thoughts on “How Linux is used in Business | Linux for Business

  1. moved my small business to linux ubuntu and elementary. Use gsuite and WPS office instead of MS office. Very happy with gsuite. Still use teams and Skype (linux versions exist). Staff is happier and errors have dropped.

  2. Hi, in this video you mentioned that you use FreeNAS. Since you're a "Debian" guy – I'm very curious why you didn't go with "open media vault" (OMV) NAS solution?
    Maybe you could do a video on that 🙂

  3. Do you have any means of running CAD software on linux?
    I have been trying for a long time now and all the software I use except 1 are windows or IOS based and other then virtualization (which take a toll for on any machine doing CAD work), I did not find a good solution. Anyone out there solved this?

  4. The education community would be wise to teach Open Office, Google Docs along with Office 365 so that a more well rounded workforce is created and gives users a choice in what they feel will work for them? or if they transition to an employer that uses open source.

  5. One think that is missing on Linux is a good CAD system like Autocad, inventor ECT. That maybe changing with onshape, project leopard what is fusion 360 in the browser. In 2d I would look at draft shigt.

  6. Microsoft invests a lot on salesmen. That's it! They BS people to use their garbage.

    What gets to me is that GOVERNMENTS are still making deals with them.
    It spells BRIBERY right, left and center!
    I've been on Linux for 25 years and can assert that Microsoft has little to do with technology, they're only about sales.

  7. Thanks for the excellent and informative (as usual) video.

    The company I work for use Linux (Fedora or Ubuntu) on all desktops. The stack used is IntelliJ IDEA (for Java development), Eclipse (for C++ development), Android Studio (for Android development), MySQL Workbench (for database access), gitolite (for the company's internal source code management). We use Thunderbird as a mail client. We have arrays of Android handsets attached to Linux machines running OpenSTF (Smartphone Test Farm), a Linux box used as the corporate VPN gateway, little NUC units running Linux for video conferencing between offices, RocketChat running on a Linux box (etc etc etc)… Everything we do is on Linux, and we tend to steer clear of just shoving everything on "the cloud" (i.e. we don't buy in to "cloud" offerings such as Amazon, Google etc…).

  8. When I started, LAMP still stood for »Linux+Apache+MySQL+Perl« — that’s Perl-CGI programming, none of that newfangled PHP business.
    (Nowadays, I use LWSR, Linux+Webrick+SQLite+Ruby for small things and turnkey Rails servers for larger things. Ruby-CGI is my favorite way of hacking HTML, though.)

  9. Interesting but did you forget databases? Everything on the cloud has some kind of open source database in the back end. Probably generates more $$$ than all your 5 top combined.

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