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Who has a positive transition from Windows to Astra Linux in the public sector?
I'm thinking of quietly starting to accustom my colleagues to Linux. The choice fell on Astra Linux Common Edition. But then the question arose about a successful transition in the state / budgetary sphere. What problems did you face? Of particular interest is the issue of EDS, 1C and other software with which they work in these areas.
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You go in a different way, choose a couple of cars, rolling on them is desired. Ask those who work for them how it is, what is wrong, look at the problems and pluses yourself. Draw conclusions from here. Jumping off just like that with a swoop will definitely not work, but this is true with any OS, even the transition from Windows xp \ 7 \ 8 \ 10 \ 11 and between themselves. There will always be those who do not care, where there are problems, those who are not so, etc.
Start small, it's not a lot of blood and real experience with real feedback from colleagues and similarly your experience with this farm.
I recently reinstalled in the local traffic police on our Russian computer with Baikal.
DE Mate, some with XFCE so no problem.
And ...
For the 2nd year, as throughout the Russian Federation in the traffic police everywhere, exams are taken on our computers with Alt-Linux with Mate.
Want to pass sex? Move
on Do you want to spend the night at work? Go
Do you want to lose the KPI? Do
you want a bunch of crap, and also on enthusiasm?)) go
The easiest distro for a beginner is Linux Mint. And it's free. Or pure ubuntu. And there, most likely, everything will work
. The desktop, as in the aster, is put in a couple of commands. And there will be no crap with turnips and software ...
It's high time
if your workers are not gamers, and this also cures Steam, Wine, Vulkan
FSE what you need = linux supports
I'm thinking of quietly starting to accustom my colleagues to Linux
In general, it seems to me that the transition in a large state is not particularly high.
The elementary banal problem is printers.
For example, I installed Linux mint, somehow installed a printer there, then the printer moved, the ships installed another one, and, lo and behold, the drivers are installed, the printer does not print ... and such equipment moves are very frequent with us and not only printers. Linux has a lot of hardware problems.
Of course, they are all solvable, but then you will not climb out of the forum.
Unless, of course, you build your Linux distribution with all the pre-installed drivers for all your hardware. and it's not a fact that everything will work at once.
While on windows you just install drivers and there are no problems (very rare)
The second point is that the software, of course, has everything you need for Linux, but everything is not as friendly as in windows. And therefore, for almost every Softina (and for every PC), you will have to manually install some crutch libraries in order for it to work.
Especially problems with office programs strain me. I opened a microsoft ofice document
in the linux office and all the text had to be redone in the wrong places, no spaces, no line breaks and many other petty problems, and if you edit it in linux, it often happens that opening it in windows is then just as problematic.
And in general, you will always then have to choose equipment that has drivers for Linux (for example, I don’t know how to put firewood from windows to linux, and if so, it’s not a fact that everything will work immediately and without problems)
PS of the pros:
Gorgeous access control
Perfect software control
Speed of work
Nothing superfluous, just what you need for work.
For free
There are no problems in general, difficulties are only with those users who use resources that can be accessed through IE and with CEP (EDS), for example, the site nalog.ru cannot be accessed, egais.ru cannot be accessed. Problems with access to Tender sites.
in the state / budgetary sphere
Astra Linux Common Edition
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