Wait, what? What happened? :( I really liked that service.
Sure, but, meh. A few dozen RAW picture files take more space. Storage is cheap nowadays and KDE applications generally are of such high quality that it's definitely worth it. Other examples are Digikam (hands-down the…
Wuala is using it, too.
There's Antergos for this.
It's indeed strange and definitely against the spirit. There's an excellent open source project which does this and much more: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.kde.kdecon...
Fedora is the only real alternative if you want more stability.
You don't even need NixOS for that. Just use Ansible or Puppet to manage your Arch Linux configuration.
RapidSSL does it too.
The reason all of those incompatible chat protocols pop up is that all of the popular federated protocols lack features like inline image transfer, a usable backlog, persistence, live previews or gimmicks like code…
Wow, this is pretty cool. Reminds me of the performance optimizations Facebook has done with Mercurial: https://code.facebook.com/posts/218678814984400/scaling-merc... Mercurial was designed to be easy to extend, and it…
The estimates may be off, but the raw data it reports (context switches, wakeups etc.) is accurate.
> What if your cronjob doesn't fire? What if LEs script has a bug and you're not up to date? That's why I renew them a week in advance. I set up Nagios checks which alert me when a certificate is not renewed. Those were…
Does it support hardening flags by now? (ASLR etc.)
Other protocols are probably just as broken, we just haven't found the vulnerabilities yet. Few protocols (if any) get as much scrutiny as SSL/TLS.
The NIST curves also have constants which may or may not be manipulated. Bruce Schneier recommends against using them.
Zulip (https://zulip.org/), a recently open-sourced Slack alternative, has a clever solution for this. They have a light-weight threading model which ensure that discussions stay within context. That way, you can just…
Google Hangouts is a great alternative. It only needs a browser, too.
> I didn't have any update-induced downtimes yet, except for the usual reboots to apply kernel upgrades Wait until the first major backwards-incompatible config format change breaks something. Puppet was one example of…
> I remember not long ago Mint included just about every browser media plugin ever made, including RealMedia, WindowsMedia etc., stuff that was obsolete 15 years ago. Maybe it still does. Weren't those just VLC wrappers?
Your project reminds me of 0install.
> WP has the ability to use (S)FTP to update the files rather than direct file access. Well that doesn't help at all with security.
This is exactly what any company using Debian in production does.
> testing is Debian's rolling release. Except for when it freezes.
> It's just in the same bag as Gentoo regarding release process. There's a big difference, though - Arch Linux has no concept of partial upgrades. You have to update, or things break. Gentoo allows you to stick with old…
> That's when enterprises might start considering moving onto that version, so the incentives aren't really aligned here. Easier said than done in many environments. RHEL 6, released in 2012, is still supported until…
Wait, what? What happened? :( I really liked that service.
Sure, but, meh. A few dozen RAW picture files take more space. Storage is cheap nowadays and KDE applications generally are of such high quality that it's definitely worth it. Other examples are Digikam (hands-down the…
Wuala is using it, too.
There's Antergos for this.
It's indeed strange and definitely against the spirit. There's an excellent open source project which does this and much more: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.kde.kdecon...
Fedora is the only real alternative if you want more stability.
You don't even need NixOS for that. Just use Ansible or Puppet to manage your Arch Linux configuration.
RapidSSL does it too.
The reason all of those incompatible chat protocols pop up is that all of the popular federated protocols lack features like inline image transfer, a usable backlog, persistence, live previews or gimmicks like code…
Wow, this is pretty cool. Reminds me of the performance optimizations Facebook has done with Mercurial: https://code.facebook.com/posts/218678814984400/scaling-merc... Mercurial was designed to be easy to extend, and it…
The estimates may be off, but the raw data it reports (context switches, wakeups etc.) is accurate.
> What if your cronjob doesn't fire? What if LEs script has a bug and you're not up to date? That's why I renew them a week in advance. I set up Nagios checks which alert me when a certificate is not renewed. Those were…
Does it support hardening flags by now? (ASLR etc.)
Other protocols are probably just as broken, we just haven't found the vulnerabilities yet. Few protocols (if any) get as much scrutiny as SSL/TLS.
The NIST curves also have constants which may or may not be manipulated. Bruce Schneier recommends against using them.
Zulip (https://zulip.org/), a recently open-sourced Slack alternative, has a clever solution for this. They have a light-weight threading model which ensure that discussions stay within context. That way, you can just…
Google Hangouts is a great alternative. It only needs a browser, too.
> I didn't have any update-induced downtimes yet, except for the usual reboots to apply kernel upgrades Wait until the first major backwards-incompatible config format change breaks something. Puppet was one example of…
> I remember not long ago Mint included just about every browser media plugin ever made, including RealMedia, WindowsMedia etc., stuff that was obsolete 15 years ago. Maybe it still does. Weren't those just VLC wrappers?
Your project reminds me of 0install.
> WP has the ability to use (S)FTP to update the files rather than direct file access. Well that doesn't help at all with security.
This is exactly what any company using Debian in production does.
> testing is Debian's rolling release. Except for when it freezes.
> It's just in the same bag as Gentoo regarding release process. There's a big difference, though - Arch Linux has no concept of partial upgrades. You have to update, or things break. Gentoo allows you to stick with old…
> That's when enterprises might start considering moving onto that version, so the incentives aren't really aligned here. Easier said than done in many environments. RHEL 6, released in 2012, is still supported until…