Propane, but I’m pretty sure natural gas uses regular NPT.
Propane, but I’m pretty sure natural gas uses regular NPT.
Local files, s3 sync on a 5 minute scheduled task to a glacier flexible retrieval bucket with versioning. Then I have an s3 sync app on my phone to make it all work like dropbox.
I think the real differentiation is understanding. AI still has no understanding of the concepts it knows. If I show a human a few dogs they will likely be able to pick out any other dog with 100% accuracy after understanding what a dog is. With AI it’s still just stasticial models that can easily be fooled.
Get a second pc and a kvm switch
Archlinux
I did 100TB, 100 streams of 1TB, all simultaneous with rsync
Red Hat, because it’s free for developers and used by a lot of enterprises.
I have a Bug A Salt Home and Garden edition and I love it. I’m in a dry climate though, so the salt doesn’t clump up. Mileage may vary if you’re in a humid place.
The person who bought the cottage next to my parents lived in the same neighborhood I was living in, 4600km away. She was just some random person who bought it.
Realize that the person who rejected you is the wrong person, since why would you want someone who doesn’t want you? Dodged a bullet there
Not big, but I have a few degenerate hoarding friends I mooch off of
Read books about how to negotiate. You can stand on the backs of giants. I’d start with “How to win friends and influence people” by Dale Carnegie, as it’s a good guide on how to just deal with people.
Why replace Hashi if you’re in the RH or IBM ecosystem? Why replace it at all if you’re an enterprise? They have enterprise support.
I’m sure enterprises are just running for the door, just like they did when IBM bought Red Hat. Also Hashicorp. Enterprises are going to dump Terraform because it’s closed source and owned by IBM
I sat down on my first day at a new job as senior admin. My boss hadn’t even arrived yet and I had no access. Someone walks up and asks “Hey, a bunch of our files are garbled, can you take a look?”
Fourth infection in a year. That was the start of my worst job ever.
2000: Big/Fat Pipe
2010: Web 2.0