I like the way you think! Such an odd choice for the location, something you just never see. And sealed like you describe, would hold up as well as anything else.
I've had doctors lead me to make certain statements so they can more readily justify a given treatment that they know I need.
It's a bit of a wink-and-a-nod situation.
It's even worse if you're part of an HMO, because the doctors are beholden to the business side, unlike independent doctors who don't have a management overhead telling them how many times a year they can prescribe a treatment, becuase they're doing it more frequently than other doctors in the system.
This demonstrates the major issue with socialized care, because it's also managed this way. I've been in both HMO and PPO systems - overall they both cost about the same despite HMOs acting like they cover more day-to-day stuff. It's just with PPO (independent doctors), I get care that's more tailored to me and my wishes, I don't get pushback from corporate, because there's no corporate involved. I may have to discuss with my doctor how to present things so my insurance won't push back, but at least the insurance company doesn't directly control my doctor's salary, bonus, etc.
All this crap started in the 80's as business management orgs started taking over healthcare organizations and consolidating them, and turning them into profit centers.
Aren't those VPNs isolated to that profile then? So only apps within that profile use the VPN in the profile?
Just trying to make sure I understand how Android does isolation. I guess if you run the apps that need each VPN in the appropriate profile and Island makes the isolation kind of transparent, it should work.
I've used Island for the app isolation, and a shortcut to an app will simply log in to the associated profile to launch the app. Just never tried with dual VPN.
It's not a reversal, it's a minor adjustment to keep companies from leaving, so they can jack the prices again next year.
They see the writing - Enterprises are adjusting by moving to solutions like Proxmox (or vendors who provide the full package support), which will drive a need for the Linux KVM skillset. This will in turn expand that skillset, enabling more SMBs to run KVM.
Note that KVM is more performant than VMware, and that VMware has already switched VMware Workstation to KVM. Yep, their own desktop app is no longer their own code, but a shell on KVM.
Die in a fire CEO. VMware was the go-to since about 2006. It will now get supplanted by versions of KVM.
Oh, man, you luddite.
I like the way you think! Such an odd choice for the location, something you just never see. And sealed like you describe, would hold up as well as anything else.