Complain that other people aren’t doing anything, apparently
Complain that other people aren’t doing anything, apparently
Except it clearly doesn’t produce the same result every time. You’re not making a good case for whatever you’re trying to say.
The issue with option one is that scammers get old (or not technical) people to do stuff when they don’t know what they’re doing and click the box not knowing what they just did. So yes very frequently they need to protect people from themselves because they’re dumb, but I still expect banks to do business with those dumb people, sooo… Option 2 it is.
Postgres doesn’t need that much ram IMO, though it may use as much as you give it. I’d reduce it’s ram and see how performance changes.
Yeah in a PR I would probably reject this for being too clever. Before clicking I expected the image to start at 100mb or more, but it’s already under 50, who cares at this point?
Why no real db? Those other 2 features make sense, but if the only option you can use sacrifices the 3rd option then it seems like a win. Postgres is awesome and easy to backup, just a single command can backup the whole thing to a file making it easy to restore.
I agree with you.
Though I would say that the grid software on its own IS useful. It’s useful to developers, otherwise they wouldn’t use it. Saying it’s useless is like saying a hammer is useless because it’s not a house, it’s only good for building a house (among other things).
1 is just not true sorry. There’s loads of stuff that only work as root and people use them.
About the trust issue. There’s no more or less trust than running on bare metal. Sure you could compile everything from source but you probably won’t, and you might trust your distro package manager, but that still has a similar problem.
$$$
Except lots of email services won’t take a technically correct email anyway.
It was never released for Windows
QML on the other hand is awesome imo.
There’s dotnet format
which will format your code. You can configure it with editorconfig
I like how Java uses it. As a C# dev I wish for it sometimes.
I use a k8s Cron job to execute backups with Kopia. The manifest is here
I just, uh, borrow them from a friend to see how they work on my rig, nothing else will give you a better representation, everything else will just be a guess.
I don’t like the idea of replacing one well known YAML schema (k8s as much as I hate it is well known), with another YAML schema that is not well known. I think I’d rather use something to get away from YAML altogether, rather than just trade one for another. The reason helm and kustomize work well is that your existing k8s resource knowledge transfers, it sounds like it wouldn’t with this thing.
Steam used an embedded browser long before it was cool.