Microsoft announced today that non-commercial users of their mobile Office apps will no longer require an active Office365 subscription in order to edit documents. By "non-commercial," they mean anything not stored on OneDrive for business or Dropbox for business. For anyone that has had to look into licensing their Office365 product, this should come as no surprise. Why anyone would pay their exorbitant licensing fees simply to have edit functionality in a mobile app when there are plenty of free and low-cost solutions out there simply mystifies me. I could see the argument for some desktop users, but who is really going to work on a complex spreadsheet or powerpoint on a mobile device?
Microsoft's next surprise is free Office for iPad, iPhone, and Android | The Verge
Showing posts with label mobile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mobile. Show all posts
Thursday, November 6, 2014
Friday, August 9, 2013
Opsview review (finally)
Well folks, after an extremely extended period of silence I'm going to try and get back to keeping this blog updated. As promised, here are my thoughts on Opsview.
I've been a fan of Nagios for a long time, but as anyone who has used it knows, it can be a pain to maintain in it's basic form and is ugly to boot. This is where Opsview comes into play. It is a very well thought out and implemented iteration of Nagios that addresses many complaints that I have with the plain vanilla package.
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