this post was submitted on 20 Nov 2024
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Recently Microsoft released the link 365 which is basically a thin client for Azure. You can't run anything locally nor is there any local files. It literally just connects you to a desktop elsewhere.

Do you think this is what Windows 12 might look like? I feel like this idea is not practical for average consumers. Maybe they will make something that's like Chrome OS?

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[–] riskable@programming.dev 25 points 21 hours ago (11 children)

Was it the future of Windows when they did this the last bunch of times? The Wyse Winterm came out in 1993. It was a huge failure then and every iteration of the same same thing since has also failed.

What makes this version different? Branding? The fact that some of the OS/software doesn't boot over the network? That you have to have a working Internet connection and not just a working local network and boot server (LOL)?

No business wants this. No consumer wants this. There is no "added value" in this device. It literally only runs software made by Microsoft and even then, only software that runs through Azure.

What office worker literally only needs Office 365? I mean, you can get away with a whole lot just in the browser but if you're going to do that why bother with this device? Just use ChromeOS stuff (and never be locked in to Microsoft's stuff).

[–] cron 19 points 21 hours ago (5 children)

Why do you say that no business wants this? Obviously, thin clients have been a thing for decades now. This is just another thin client, nothing more.

[–] marcos@lemmy.world -2 points 21 hours ago (4 children)

Thin clients have been failing to sell and being cursed by entire verticals, from individual contributors to top management any time they find an exception for that failure since the 1990s.

No thin client ever saw repeat customers since dump terminals went away. But yeah, if your point is that they exist and have curstomers, that's true.

[–] cron 5 points 21 hours ago

The only 'big' customer of thin clients I know is a hospital. I believe thin clients are well suited for highly standardized and strictly controlled workplaces.

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