• katy ✨@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    22 hours ago

    i mean if you’re staying on 14.04 you should at least cough up some money so they can keep maintaining it. like seriously

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    I love the fact that Ubuntu, Redhat and SUSE are competing for long term enterprise support. The philosophy “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” rings true, Linux enterprise deployment business make more revenue and the update backports and security backport fixes help the wider community too.

    • superglue@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      22 hours ago

      As long as it secure, lots of businesses. If it works and you dont need the new features of future releases and just want reliability.

      • frongt@lemmy.zip
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        22 hours ago

        Yup. We use software that depends on 20.04, but we do have an upgrade path. We are moving to 22.04 as those projects wrap up. We can’t go to 24.04 yet because it’s not certified compatible and doesn’t work.

    • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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      19 hours ago

      I decommissioned multiple 2008R2 hosts in the past couple of years and at least one 2008.

      If the business had it their way they would keep using them forever because they don’t want to pay any money or figure out a solution that lets them access historical data on a modern platform…

      I’m sure i’m not alone. I’m positive older hosts are running out there at all kinds of orgs large and small. This isn’t just a windows problem either. The weakest link is still probably some refrigeration controller with an internet connection.

      • Peffse@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        You should have seen the panic back in 2017 when my team found a cluster of Server 2003 running at a hospital.

        The client thought it was fine.

        • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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          19 hours ago

          Let me guess

          “It’s still running fine! I don’t see the problem.” -Business

          “What’s it do?”-IT Consultant

          “Oh, it’s our ERP. Every worker here is connected to it via RDP including the folks working from home, and we don’t even have VPN! It’s just a little slow. Can you make it faster?”-Business

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      my guess is someone big wants it and offered to pay enough to fund it, so canonical is just opening up the same support timeframe to anyone willing cough-up some cash.