Wouldn’t trying to change your mind basically become a self fulfilling prophecy.
Wouldn’t trying to change your mind basically become a self fulfilling prophecy.
I found their laptops to be potato quality and their support to be less than helpful tbh. I really wish it was different because I love the concept, but quality is not there yet.
K9S, it is a TUI kubernetes manager that really integrates well into my workflow.
Irssi all the way
I had the same idea a couple years back and even though I would love something that you download and just run and it would work, I realized that in order to get a decent adoption rate, you would need a whole ecosystem, similar to apple in order for it to work.
I still think you can develop something like a hub where you install services like apps, but I doubt it would attract anyone outside selfhosting circles.
Not that I’m opposed to a better sudo alternatives, but I find it rather ironic that one of the reason stated is the large attack surface, considering systemd is a massive attack surface already.
There are several things you can and should do to harden your server, many of them can be found here.
Not my current distro but I love ChimeraLinux, they manage to put musl and BSD userland into a working wonderful distro. I wish more distros adopted musl.
There are tons av resources (scripts, guides, examples) that make up the backbone of a lot of IT departments.
If you’re setting a new organisation, you can chose to go with nushell, but then you have to accept that you either need to write all scripts from scratch, or you need to convert an existing script to nushell. If you put nushell into an existing department/organisation, then you face the same problem.
Before there are substantial resources to solve common sysadmin tasks in nushell, organisational adoption is unlikely due to the cost.
As much as I want to champion nushell, the problem is that it isn’t available on every machine like traditional shells.
That means my whole organisation need to have nushell installed on every machine, and even then, any scripts using nushell is effectively useless outside the organisation.
At first I thought it may have been because of this CVE, but if it has been like that for a month, then it’s something else.
Switched over to wayland about 4-5 years ago, have run into a couple of problems dealing with theming, fractional scaling and of course nvidia, but on the whole my experience has been without major issues.
Wouldn’t tar --help suffice? Afaik, it returns exit code 0.
My os is running with a slightly modified us qwerty, which then is mapped through keyboard firmware to a modified us dvorak.
I wouldn’t recommend specific ones, but I would recomnend you try out distros with unique features. Such as an immutable one, one that is built from source, one with packages, one with snap, one with flatpack, etc.
This will help you understand and evaluate what you like.
Did you check their support guides https://support.yubico.com/hc/en-us/articles/360016649099-Ubuntu-Linux-Login-Guide-U! ?
Ah just read the post title. Thanks for the correction!
l wouldn’t call half of these java frameworks
NSA do seem a likely culprit, Russia seem like an unlikely target for the other major players. I too am far too much of a noob to properly evaluate the sophistication of this exploit.
I used to use ansible and helm, but it is overkill for my case. Today I basically use a combo of markdown and bash scripts, the combination of them allows me to run the scripts straight from my IDE.