On the host besides the Win-VM runs a Linux MX-VM with an XRDP-Server as a secure surf environment for my employees - on Windows I blocked their internet access with Sandboxie. The hardware of the terminal server is a refurbished Dell workstation (32 GB ECC-RAM, Xeon E5-1620v2), running 24/7 in my office, with SSD-RAID1 (still Win 10 for host, because RAID1 on Linux MX is too difficult for me, though MX runs VMWare Player faster than Win 10 does), weekly backups/copies of the full VM. Thinstuff) for 5-6 people and for almost all my needs in business and private life. My central PC is a virtualized (VMWare Player) Windows 10 Professional (16 GB RAM), which works as a terminal server (e. I`m a small business owner and dentist with 4-5 employees, about 10 PCs (Windows, Chrome OS, Linux) in office and at home. I am interested in the fact that you are using MX in a business environment, but a discussion for another time. I agree, the word "support" seemed to me like "you can't install this" not that MX team won't take any responsibility for whatever happens to our systems after installing X app. Users and in our case Qualified Guides also help "support" by testing and troubleshooting. A "Package Maintainer" they are about as close to official "support" as you'll get (besides the actual application developer) because they volunteer to take responsibility of the said application package for the Distro. Linux Distros support applications by creating and "maintaining" a package of the application from start to finish (dependency resolution, testing, troubleshooting, and updating). Linux Distros do not "support" applications just because it can be installed in some way shape or form. Potential for installation and usability does not equal "support". ![]() ![]() Lets make some things a bit more clear and laid out since there is some confusion.
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