Strong agree. It’s also the absolute best at expressing really long documents of configuration/data.
Strong agree. It’s also the absolute best at expressing really long documents of configuration/data.
Hope you stopped at Peace, Love, & Little Donuts or De Fer while you were there! 😋
I think that’s the way both Splunk and JFrog work – you generate or enter a password into the key field in a YAML file somewhere, start the service, and next time you come back the field’s been encrypted.
It’s more over-the-top and arcade-y. Things like volcanos exploding as you ride down the slopes and an indoor mall-like mountain in Tokyo with an air-lift you use to do laps. Note that it’s not free-ride, so there are pluses and minuses to it.
I can confirm both Pixels and Samsung phones have that feature (1/2/4 hours or indefinite). On my current phone (Samsung) you get the option by holding the DND button.
In case you’re missing it, this is what the Stephen King book and movie “Maximum Overdrive” is about, but technologically behind by 50 years. Radio signals and power surges just happen to influence machines all over the world into vengefully killing people.
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Oh, it’s all still Kubernetes YAML. The difference is in how it’s represented. Helm Charts are packaged Golang templates of Kubernetes YAML, and as such have a whole lot of limitation since the only logic you can put into them is Golang template logic.
This is still Kubernetes YAML, but instead you write any program you want to return the YAML, as long as it fits in the sandbox, so it’s pretty open-ended. For example, as a stretch goal, I might add an engine to it that could recompile Helm Charts into Mistletoe Modules.
So Helm never fell short for me as an end user. As far as that goes, it’s near-perfect.
Where it does fall short is as a package writer. A package in Helm is just Kubernetes YAML that’s templated in Golang templates. As such, it gets very hard to any logic beyond the most basic, and projects that get larger get very unwieldy.
Hmm, what’s your idea for the OCI image format, e.g., how would it work? That might be worth looking into, too.
I really agree. As quick as I am to be cynical about low-impact press releases from a conglomerate, I do find it interesting to read through design changes and the symbolic meaning in branding.
I think Dial dish soap?
Good thing is that the smell does fully go away even if you don’t get to it. My house had a problem with mice in the attic and walls, but there was no patching fix that could reasonably done, since this is an old and pretty drafty house. They can really slip through the smallest cracks, even underground, and there had to be a hundred of cracks like that. Putting up and swapping snap traps was a pretty onerous task that never seemed to fully work.
The pest control crew that did fix the problem did so by putting a bunch of slow-acting poison bait traps around the property and in the attic. 3 days later some seriously awful smells popped up throughout the house, but they went away after a little over a week. Those mice are part of the building now, but I’ve completely forgotten about them.
That gets wildly different with how taxing games are and how much they specifically take advantage of x86_64 instructions sets. Even decade old games would barely squeak by, if they don’t break entirely.
I mean, I get it, but there’s value in paying for support and updates, and it’s untenable for an organization to do that for free. I’m optimistic for software running under this model, I’d 1000% love to go back to the pay once per major version model, but “pay once forever” software leaves some unanswered questions.
I know right? I can’t quite put my finger on why, but it gives me “Fault of Amigara” vibes
Is Mozilla 100% forced to comply with this? What’s to stop them from dropping their French presence and keep serving the browser unaltered on the public web? Do they also then get added to the ban list?
The thought behind this is alarming and worrying, but the mechanism of action seems shoddy and not thought out at all.
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Anyone with a Mac
Same, Fedora’s my main driver at this point. It’s the only one that seems to support being close to the edge that well without instability. And I no longer have the patience or risk acceptance for Arch/-derived systems at this point, as much as I enjoy using them as a hobby and to preview the latest tech stacks.