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While Microsoft claims to have an easy-to-use Office 365 suite—it's
While Microsoft claims to have an easy-to-use Office 365 suite—it's only available for Windows 10 Pro subscribers—the fact remains, with a subscription of some sort, that only a very few users can install it. And with the latest version, this plan could be a long shot.
"We are working with other partners on the Windows 10 Pro roadmap to improve the capabilities of Office 365 and our existing partners with Office 365 customers to support the Windows 10 Pro ecosystem," Microsoft says.
Microsoft is currently at work on a Windows 10 Pro version of Office 365 called a Microsoft Office 365 Express for Business with SharePoint. The company says it has begun work on the "next generation" version of the product, but it's unclear when that will be available.
Microsoft is currently in the early stages of pre-leasing a Windows 10 Pro service for Windows 10 Pro. The service is available only for the Windows 10 Pro subscription model, but it could be rolled out to other Windows customers. It appears that Microsoft will continue to work with other OEMs to bring such an offer to the enterprise, but it's unclear when the company will be able to provide that customer with a Microsoft cloud, or how it would handle the new content offered by the Office 365 Express.The New York Times has called out two of its editorial pages for using a cartoonist's word to promote a racist political message.
In the editorial, "What is Hitler" in the United Kingdom, the headline reads: "In the name of the American flag, it makes no sense to use a cartoonist's word." In India, it says, the line "in the name of the Indian national anthem" is a reference to a Hindu-Muslim conflict.
The Times then says that "the cartoonist's 'political' message is an attempt to 'get Americans to believe in the idea that Indians are not the majority.' The cartoons are meant to be taken seriously as an expression of the American way of life."
The Times claims of the cartoonist: "In some places, a person can stand up and say 'oh I am a human being,' but only when it is done to a person who is not a human being."
In the United States, the cartoonist's words are used as a rallying cry to justify a hate crime, though that is not the case in the United States.
The Times goes on to say that the cartoonist is "saying something that is politically incorrect."
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