Kids are already coming out of school computer illiterate. They know how to use specific applications, but don’t know things like directory hierarchy. Onboarding young people into working with general office productivity like SharePoint, or giving them a real grown up laptop instead of an ipad is like teaching boomers to open PDFs all over again. All the same old training and helpdesk calls.
the solution is the same as it was 30 years ago: computer class where they deep dive into how the things work, not just how Microsoft and Apple decide the things are used.
The most correct answer so far is Win11 IoT. But there’s a good chance it won’t have enough “windows” for your school needs.
If you’re just trying to get work done and not trying to stick it to the man with the purity test that this thread seems to insist upon, you can install normally and force an offline user.
Then run Chris Titus debloat utility before you set up anything else.
If you don’t have a registration, you can activate it with massgrave.dev.
It’s the nut recessed? If not, you can use a splitter on it.
This reply is the closest thing to fix advice in this thread.
The only thing that’s going to get that out without cutting a slot is a tack weld. Which will likely burn the wood. Just cut a slot. You can find another aged carriage bolt to replace it.
While I support the idea of using RSS readers to break free from algorithmic and/or AI curated feeds, I’ve mostly stopped bothering, since all the content that gets into the feeds has become algorithmic, AI slop.
There’s just no escaping it these days.
missing a way to find out what they do without installing them
At the very top of the project page it says:
Termix is a web-based server management platform with SSH terminal, tunneling, and file editing capabilities.
Now you know what it does without installing it