I will never forgive JSON for not allowing commas after the last element in a list.
I will never forgive JSON for not allowing commas after the last element in a list.
Yeah, you’d have a LoadBalancer service for Traefik which gets assigned a VIP outside the cluster.
virtual IP addresses
Yeah, metallb.
The container is reproducible. Container configuration is in version control. That leaves you with the volumes mounted into the container, which you back up like any other disk.
It’s not that Seagate improved (which it may have), it’s more that WD has noticeably declined. It’s not a race to the bottom (yet), but there’s effectively no competition any more, so they aren’t incentivised to improve quality.
Figure out the uid/gid (numeric) for the user in lxc, then change the data permissions to those.
Since FF 6 and 7 have already been mentioned, I’m going to give a honorable mention to Shining Force.
Use -m
and limit the build job’s memory so it doesn’t kill the docker daemon.
So TCP ACK is the backwash?
Yep, if you request the desktop version you don’t get that redirect.
Or just request the desktop version.
I’ve seen it successfully happen due to licensing costs and cloud migration (MSSQL->Spanner), as well as for scalability reasons (vanilla postgres->cockroach). The first one was a significant change in features, the latter did sacrifice some native plugins. In the first case the company was using vendor specific features, and rewrote the backend to fit the new vendor.
There’s vendor agnosticism, and then there’s platform agnosticism. Writing your code so that it’s not tied to one specific implementation of postgres is fine, and lets you use a compatible drop-in. Writing your code so you can swap MSSQL for Oracle or Aurora or whatever at will does not make sense. In every case of attempted platform agnosticism I’ve seen they ended up abandoning the project within a year or two with nothing to show for it.
If you remove the speeches from Trek, don’t you just end up with the kind of content everyone seems to be complaining about in JJ-Trek?
Or they work in a regulated industry that requires pseudo-airgapped machines for remote users, e.g. the machine actually interacting with the systems needs to be within the controlled boundary but the company has a presence in multiple locations, so the solution is to have a Citrix server that the users remote into. But because the SSP also has access control requirements at every stage that take a long time to get updated to newest industry standards, the user still needs to have passwords rotated, MFA, and all that kaboodle.
Note that Wasabi has no egress fees, but has a transfer limit - essentially the contract stipulates that your monthly egress will be less than the amount of storage you pay for.
No, it’s not missing the point. The premise that you’re always looking at code on the same screen is false, and you don’t always have control over how all screens are configured.
Now you’re just shifting the goalpost.
The whole reason nearly all the spaces guys do 4 spaces is cause that’s the nearly universal tab width.
That is provably wrong. The default tab width in vim is 8 spaces, and the default indentation in yaml is two spaces.
Is a chicken egg an egg laid by a chicken, or an egg that if fertilized would hatch into a chicken?