irelephant [he/him]@programming.devM to iiiiiiitttttttttttt@programming.devEnglish · 19 hours agoWe put the Thing That Can't Do Numbers™ in your spreadsheetsprogramming.devimagemessage-square42fedilinkarrow-up1540arrow-down15
arrow-up1535arrow-down1imageWe put the Thing That Can't Do Numbers™ in your spreadsheetsprogramming.devirelephant [he/him]@programming.devM to iiiiiiitttttttttttt@programming.devEnglish · 19 hours agomessage-square42fedilink
minus-squareshalafi@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up2·11 hours agoI’d vote for Active Directory being a solid product. If you’re running a fleet of Windows machines, accept no substitute. :) To forestall any comments about alternative auth schemes; If that’s all you think AD is, you don’t know AD.
minus-squareHawke@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·5 hours agoRegardless of the quality of AD as a product (it’s mostly good but has a lot of questionable stuff…) It has been the sole driver of LDAP + Kerberos standardization over the last 20 years, and has excelled in that despite its flaws.
I’d vote for Active Directory being a solid product. If you’re running a fleet of Windows machines, accept no substitute. :)
To forestall any comments about alternative auth schemes; If that’s all you think AD is, you don’t know AD.
Regardless of the quality of AD as a product (it’s mostly good but has a lot of questionable stuff…)
It has been the sole driver of LDAP + Kerberos standardization over the last 20 years, and has excelled in that despite its flaws.