You don't have to use all the features. Restarting a service is a pretty broad feature.
If it's too broad, You will likely have to code something yourself.
If you don't have another server, this is likely your best option.
It's a simple app, that pings the website on a given interval and gives an app notification if it can't reach it.
In my area we have a brand called LEDvance, which ships both wifi and zigbee bulbs. I have some of the Zigbee ones and I don't need anything other than HomeAssistant to add them to my network.
(b) is much more resilient, because the onus is not on Kaspersky spyware to maintain a blacklist and naughty sites which will constantly be out of date
You think an underfunded government department can do a better job than a security company with money enough to give their bosses bonuses each year?
I would suggest you start reading up on reverse proxies, like nginx, caddy or traefik. And maybe docker, to containerize your services, so you don't "splatter" stuff all over your filesystem.
Unless your company's IT department specifically setup the drives on the local network to be accessible from other OS's then Windows, you won't be able to connect to them, without setting up Samba/CIFS.
As others have status, if you are allowed to use Linux as a company device, ask your IT department how to access the company stuff.
If you are not really allowed and are just doing, you probably won't have access to much that is not a webapp.
General Fedora feedback: the discover update app feels lacking here. As a new user, I expect more of a description about what each application/service is as well as a clickable link to read more about the app and the update.
That's because Discover handles 3 types of updates.
Applications from a "Store". These are the ones you are expecting with descriptions and such.
Packages from the repository of the distro. These are the ones you have listed. They are "technical" package names, not limited to applications. Can also be libraries, dependencies and system stuff.
Firmware. If you have enabled the Linux Firmware option in Discover, you will get presented with special firmware packages.
Best you can do for the battery is turning down the screen brightness to the lowest setting where you can still see what's on the screen. Mine is ususally at 20-30% brightness.
It's noted in the release notes that they release a new major version every 3 months.