it is heavy on crypto bro content :) https://eli5.gg/Q > Q > > q: What is a cryptocurrency? ELI5: A cryptocurrency is a type of digital money that uses special codes to make sure transactions are secure. People can use…
i also accepted it. And made a point to forget the cisco experience. Yeah, the dependency is a fine feature, but before it was even *easier*... just put a number on the rc.d symlink. c'mon, if you think that is harder…
I also have a small compact car and it is fine for me to drive it every day to work, market, etc. Doesn't mean an expensive sports car is not much, much faster. The irony is that here the compact car is more expensive…
you think free CDs worldwide is cheap?! they paid for "CD vending machines" at several locations where you could get free cds... that is more expensive than a billboard and practically buys you a spot on specialized…
systemd is "easier" for people used to cisco/microsoft/etc. The huge list of services with not-for-human names so your job can look complicated and essential.
their NICs will not work with regular kernel drivers. you will lose the only edge their hardware have which is dealing with a stupid large number of clients. everything else (speed, uptime, ram/cpu power, beanforming…
it is heavy on crypto bro content :) https://eli5.gg/Q > Q > > q: What is a cryptocurrency? ELI5: A cryptocurrency is a type of digital money that uses special codes to make sure transactions are secure. People can use…
i also accepted it. And made a point to forget the cisco experience. Yeah, the dependency is a fine feature, but before it was even *easier*... just put a number on the rc.d symlink. c'mon, if you think that is harder…
I also have a small compact car and it is fine for me to drive it every day to work, market, etc. Doesn't mean an expensive sports car is not much, much faster. The irony is that here the compact car is more expensive…
you think free CDs worldwide is cheap?! they paid for "CD vending machines" at several locations where you could get free cds... that is more expensive than a billboard and practically buys you a spot on specialized…
systemd is "easier" for people used to cisco/microsoft/etc. The huge list of services with not-for-human names so your job can look complicated and essential.
their NICs will not work with regular kernel drivers. you will lose the only edge their hardware have which is dealing with a stupid large number of clients. everything else (speed, uptime, ram/cpu power, beanforming…