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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.
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.
*'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 honestly prefer Ansible.
I use Ansible all day. For work. Oh, god, is it sad compared to everything else in the space. RedHat had the choice between two in-house products and they chose poorly.
It can do lots of configuration and [set up] and install flatpaks.
We had that 20 years ago, just with a different product. The state of the art is now two generations newer.
I’m gonna be honest I’ve never had a flatpak version of something ever work properly.
As someone once involved with OS Security, I beg you not to use FlatPaks.
a security specislist.
I like how you highlight one of my pet peeves there.
Docs like this should be living so they can be fixed.
The best kanban is the one you already have. It’s like “the best camera is the one you have with you” – Annie Lennox, I think.
For me, that’s gitlab on-prem.
The real story’s in the comments. This helped my single-mother-friend stay sane in the early/poorest years. Everyone needs to know how their library has changed since they last borrowed a book in 1982. Thanks for posting this – I forgot too!
All the signs of Lennart, but he’s now left.
Help/Advices
Sure! ‘advice’ isn’t pluralized with an S. It’s like ‘traffic’; and you don’t say ‘traffics’ as a noun.
Happy to help!
Was that what got my comment removed?
My entire career is one counterexample to this after another. It’s not that I’ve seen different; I’ve only seen different.
Or that?
Now go fud someone else if you want your weekly bonus, comrade.
It reminds me of a joke that ends in “I don’t know, and I don’t care”, but the setup seems so much more relevant.
Secondly, I wish people could stop trying to teach everyone that Linux isn’t the OS. Anyone that cares already knows, and anyone that doesn’t know doesn’t care.
Ironically, the people who need to hear this don’t care.
It’s 100% stallman trying to coat-tails Linus.
What I’ve learned in 30 years of using Linux is the gnu/Linux distinction only matters to the kind of whacko I can’t work with. It’s a great mineshaft canary to let me know whom not to invest any time in.
Wer’re aware of it, comrade.
Gasoline is not the solution to a small fire.
Removed by mod
- You dont feel like youre defusing a bomb like when writing C.
Whoa, Skippy. It’s not saving the world, it’s just coding properly.
Yet another problem that actually updating your shit - which is trivially easy on enterprise Linux - would fix.
It’s part of the 95% of problems solved by actually updating your enterprise Linux host.
a use-after-free error, a class of vulnerability that occurs in software written in the C and C++ languages when a process continues to access a memory location after it has been freed or deallocated.
Immediately I noticed how when Teslas can’t drive themselves we also blame the car and not the driver.
Weak. Blame the driver.
Former OS security chief here.
Please, God, avoid flatpaks, appimages and snaps. They break rules just to break more rules, and you’re the victim.
Whoa, but the comma splice.
Are we doing popularity contests here?
Back to webnames for you.