We tried. But I have other things to do than spend my time trying to argue with people that we should be allowed to get Linux machines on our corporate network.
The only option that we had is to run a corporate-managed VM on Azure, with their own "linux" which is a special build from oracle that I never heared of before they mentionned it, and where no open source tools seems to offer any kind of support.
WSL is the only option that I have. HyperV is not stable enough on Linux, and VirtualBox is blocked by corporate rules.
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Corporate.
We tried. But I have other things to do than spend my time trying to argue with people that we should be allowed to get Linux machines on our corporate network.
The only option that we had is to run a corporate-managed VM on Azure, with their own "linux" which is a special build from oracle that I never heared of before they mentionned it, and where no open source tools seems to offer any kind of support.
WSL is the only option that I have. HyperV is not stable enough on Linux, and VirtualBox is blocked by corporate rules.