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Kerika uses Java, so it looks, feels, and behaves the same
regardless of whether you are using a Mac, a Windows PC or a Linux machine.
There are all kinds of situations where this can be very useful:
- If you are in professional services, for example, you have to work with a variety of partners,
suppliers and customers, all of whom have their own computer preferences: designers like to
use Macs and developers like to play with Linux while your corporate clients stay with Windows.
(Learn more about how you can use Kerika for work-related projects.)
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If you are a college student, you will find that group projects have become a standard part of
undergraduate courses at the junior and senior levels, and some of your team mates are likely to be Mac or Linux fans.
(Learn more about how you can use Kerika for university projects.)
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If you are involved in social change and political advocacy, with a non-profits, foundation or NGO, you need
to quickly and inexpexpensively pull together a dispersed group of funders, volunteers and staff
members, and the last thing you want to worry about is whether everyone on the team is using the same kind of computer!
(Learn more about how you can use Kerika for social change and political advocacy.)
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And, finally, if you are doing something fun, like organizing a whitewater rafting trip with old college friends
or maybe just a vacation trip with your extended family, you are going to need a way to link up people who are
using different kinds of computers.
(Learn more about how you can use Kerika for personal projects.)
With Kerika, you can string together all sorts of people in a people-to-people networkTM
network without worrying about people's personal preferences for Macs, Windows or Linux.
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