Da, comrade.
Da, comrade.
Just pining for the microgravity.
I suspect the make-up and shoe were a metaphor for fronts and personalities, but that may be a little deep.
I don’t prefer proxmox, but I will say that when you have even a machine with 8 or 16gb RAM, virtualizing a workload on it just makes sense. At that point the cost is 12% resources, and the benefits IMHO farrr outweight that.
Problems? ‘old’? I seem to need a little clarification.
Some day we’ll learn that memes aren’t rushed pre-T9 SMS messages from 1995. ‘ppl’? The nineties are over: evolve with the times!
expensive piece-of-shit (enterprise) systems, since they sometimes explode if your server changes interface names.
At no time in the past 25 years with Medium Iron have I seen something blow up on a reboot because an interface comes up late. We’d solved the issue of unreliable init order in 1998 - RH6? Zoot? Compaq, Supermicro, even embedded stuff on was-shit/still-shit gigabyte mobos. /etc/udev/rules.d handled this reliably, consistently and perfectly. Fight me.
so does RPM.
Careful. Jeff’s format gives us really great advantages from an atomic package that we don’t have elsewhere. THAT, at least, was a great thing.
Lennart’s Cancer, though, can die in a fire.
It’s amazing how many linux problems stem from ‘Redhat, however, found this solution too simple and instead devised their own scheme’. Just about every over complex, bloated bit of nonsense we have to fight with has the same genesis.
Ansible can be heard mumbling incoherently and so, so slowly, from the basement.
Remember who saw apt4rpm and said “too fast, too immune from python fuckage, so let’s do something slower and more frail”. twice.
Running
npm install
would give me a mini heart attack
It should; but more because it installs things right off the net with no validation. Consistency of code product is not the only thing you’re tossing.
It’s not the product, it’s the cavalier consumption of unsigned add-ons despite knowing better.
*'til
But the lack of verification and validation is a huge risk to flatpaks. As someone formerly involved with securing OSes, this kind of thing was scary back then and doubly scary since it entered its “don’t confirm; just get in, loser” phase.
I quit my startup like that.
We were making it: we were eking by and just starting to turn the corner when one of the partners did some legal wrangling to grab power. FineYouDoIt.jpg because I’d had enough already and prepped my next job.
Hopped a plane. Hopped another. Hopped another. Three people on the planet knew where I was: Mom, GF, and guy who bashes bags at the local airport who saw my name on the flight manifest and checked my connection. Went to the waiting apartment to start the next day. Never looked back, didn’t answer email except when Cop friend emailed and asked whether I was missing. Nope, so case closed.
The Clovis people would like a word.
But they’re wiped out. Violently.
Weird how that’s not in the stories though.
The CF is an armed force. It’s a force that is armed.
Primarily it’s brought out for prisoner search and sandbags. So, so, so-so, so, so many sandbags.
Um, sorry. We’ll be more polite.
Typescript, VS Code, and DotNet Core
Aren’t these all just its own products?
And wow, do I hate VS Code. Just sayin.
A someone who worked in OS security, I beg you dont use flatpaks.
Two things:
That’s it.
Sorry; what would be the alternative NOW?!?
I don’t see all that happening before it’s time to vote, so isn’t what you’re saying now a bit of a distraction from the very real risk to the stability of the country?