Having to sign up to yet another platform to support someone’s work can introduce a lot of unnecessary friction
To solve this, here’s yet another platform
Having to sign up to yet another platform to support someone’s work can introduce a lot of unnecessary friction
To solve this, here’s yet another platform
If you have to try really hard to meet their password requirements, that’s how you know it’s super secure.
At home vs. for work are very different. At home, I self host as much as I can. At work, I use as many managed services as I can. Especially databases.
I have really been wanting to try it out. Is there any good off the shelf hardware that you can use as “smart speakers” for it yet?
This is where we say switch to Linux, right?
You get to drink from the fire hose!!!
Wordpress is just the worst
Oh man I went through this phase too. I had the clear acrylic case and a bunch of those UV CCFL tubes.
Microsoft:
Obligatory “there are now 15 competing standards”
For real though, this looks interesting. I am a long time poetry user, I’ve been mostly happy with it but I do think it could stand to be a little faster. I’ll have to try this out sometime.
I will (and have been) doing my absolute to avoid buying any kind of physical device that requires an app to function
Same. It’s becoming more difficult every day.
I feel like most of the sites I’ve seen password limits like this on are financial in nature, where it’s all theatrics - the appearance of security takes precedence over (and in some cases comes at the expense of) actual security.
Holy shit, I never even thought to do something like this. Hahaha. I’m gonna try it later.
The “host” is just your friendly name for the connection, not necessarily the hostname of the remote host. You can specify the same username or hostname as many times as you want. My config is made up of mostly blocks like this:
Host server1
HostName server1.you.com
User your_ssh_username
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/yourprivatekey.pem
Host server2
HostName server2.you.com
User your_ssh_username
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/yourprivatekey.pem
Seems to be only if you’re on a recommendation based playlist like discover weekly or release radar
I’m just annoyed that it replaces the repeat and shuffle buttons, but only sometimes.
There are two types of languages: ones people bitch about, and ones no one uses
Oooh, I assumed a 3u shelf would have bigger fans, but I just realized I never actually saw any fans inside that thing. Reading more about it now, apparently it has some kind of nonstandard squirrel cage fans? Damn.
R730 is a dual socket server right? I would expect a fair amount of heat and power consumption from that just for storage. I’d definitely expect less heat from a shelf cause it’s only power+disks, no cpu(s). I’ve been looking for a way to separate out my storage too, with similar concerns. Maybe add power consumption too. I also want something that can fit in a shallow rack. I’d just get a synology if they weren’t so expensive.
Anyway, I found the EMC KTN-STL3 which is a 3u 15 bay disk shelf. They are dirt cheap and all over ebay. Was thinking about pairing that with a r230 or something. I think both units have a relatively low idle power usage. Don’t know about noise, everything you read is very subjective, so it’s hard to tell without just getting one. I like the r230 cause it has 2 pcie slots for hba + 10gbe nic. But if you don’t care about that or have something else already, there are lots of other options.
Nice. You should check out devcontainers if you haven’t already. Maybe it deviates a little from the dev/prod parity idea, but you can use it with a compose file like you described. It’s saved my current team quite a bit of headache in maintaining local dev environments and keeping everyone in sync as the project evolves.