Use a separate work device for work purposes and let the company worry about the rest of it.
Privacy
A place to discuss privacy and freedom in the digital world.
Privacy has become a very important issue in modern society, with companies and governments constantly abusing their power, more and more people are waking up to the importance of digital privacy.
In this community everyone is welcome to post links and discuss topics related to privacy.
Some Rules
- Posting a link to a website containing tracking isn't great, if contents of the website are behind a paywall maybe copy them into the post
- Don't promote proprietary software
- Try to keep things on topic
- If you have a question, please try searching for previous discussions, maybe it has already been answered
- Reposts are fine, but should have at least a couple of weeks in between so that the post can reach a new audience
- Be nice :)
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[Matrix/Element]Dead
much thanks to @gary_host_laptop for the logo design :)
I’ve been using Thunderbird with the OWL and TBSync plugins for exchange for years with good results. Obviously some things won’t work (teams integration, provisioned signatures, mail merge, etc) but it’s good enough that I only need proper outlook/OWA less than once a month.
Another option is “installing” the webapp as a PWA. I tried that for a bit but found notifications to be unreliable.
I used Davmail which acts as a bridge to access Outlook from Thunderbird. There is a thunderbird plugin, but it was paid so I backed out.
If your browser supports PWAs, I’d reccomend that over the electron app you linked. You’d get better performence, and it would be snappier.
After years of actively making it work in Thunderbird, I ended up using a browser tab. It's more reliable, gives you access to settings such as filters, and it's easy to close after work with all the other tabs in my “work” browser.
Evolution looks and behaves a lot like outlook. works well for me
I used to use evolution. The main reason was that evolution was the only client I found at the time ( except bluemail I think? ) which supported the ActiveSync protocol. IMAP and the like was blocked. They had to allow it specifically in AD so it would work.
I never really took a liking to evolution personally. Can't really say why. The outdated UI didn't help.
I think Thunderbird might have support for it through a custom plugin which I refused to buy.
Eventually I went back to the PWA. Since i only checked my emails twice a day and it wasn't exactly core to my job I stopped caring. The majority of the mails were management patting themselves on the back and look how great we're doing anyway. At the end of the year you get shafted on bonus and higher targets regardless of everybody doing a "great job".
Pardon the rant. The company left me a bit sour.
i picked up a machine just for this purpose. even though im just using outlook in browser, work and personal are air-gapped so to speak.
Why are there so many people using Linux for work. Are you using your personal machines for work? If so why? Or do your company allow installing whatever OS you want on the work machine?
I was running Ubuntu at work. And a coworker was running PopOs.
Company didn't really care what you ran. If you opted for Linux you couldn't really rely on device support. Which is usually fine for the average Linux user.
I've used Linux/Mac for so long in a work environment that I only use Windows as a gaming system. And even that has improved a lot.
My last company was Linux only, and we could pick whatever we wanted. My current company is macOS only, which isn't great but at least it's not Windows.
If they're going to force me to use Windows or Mac, I'd much rather Windows than Mac. Piece of shit of an "operating system".
Why? macOS feels a lot like Linux in my regular workflow, which is largely terminal based. There's two decent package managers (homebrew and macports, I use macports), tmux and vim work as you would expect, etc. 90% of my workflow is the same between macOS and Linux.
I've tried WSL, and the workflow just doesn't feel right.
But at my company, there's another huge caveat: IT locks down the Windows machines, whereas there's pretty much no oversight on the macOS computers. That has a ton of value for me.
yes, company allows installing any OS. Also my previous employer was a University, who maintains their own flavor on Linux, which was then one of the official choices in addition to Windows and OSX.
I'm a contractor. They give me work and money, I give them result. I use what works best, and it's a linux distro.
Not every work environment is the same.
When I first started with my current employer I was given a system with RHEL preinstalled and I replaced it with Fedora on my first day. I was told to use LUKS and given a normal OpenVPN profile but otherwise they don't control or monitor anything about my workstation. No matter how many years or decades I stay at this company, it's extremely unlikely I'll ever touch an OS that isn't Linux-based during work time.
Every previous job I've been at also had me use Linux for my primary workstation, because my field of work more or less requires it, but some have needed me to access a separate Windows system/server/VM on rare occasions.
I keep wondering the same. Windows is mandatory. Even in the it departement.
Yep. Windows or Mac. Typical corporate IT spyware isn't even available on Linux.
I use Firefox for most purposes, but have chromium on there for anything related to grad school. Which includes, among other things, Office 365 and Outlook Online. On Fedora 38 if it matters.
Used to use Thunderbird with enigmail for PGP back in the day, it was good. The separate browser is fine now, but T bird is a fine option.