definitely not.
small differences between BSDs' userland and GNU's.
Not sure. To me Flatcar brings the original CoreOS spirit..
Two CoreOSes? The one being Fedora CoreOS and the other..?
oh, wow!
Did I miss something or bbcp seems a bit abandoned to itself?
+1 Used fdt to transfer a 6TB archive out of AWS very smoothly at full speed.
+1!
Glasnot. Glasnyet.
If u have a state-owned, state-run DNS service with a root zone and cooperation (forced or not) from ISPs, you really would not have to care about https, and if CT services are not reachable nobody would know.
I've been running CURRENT in production myself for about 2 years now. No problems so far.
+1 for the assertion about the destiny of CoreOS.
is this true?
definitely not.
small differences between BSDs' userland and GNU's.
Not sure. To me Flatcar brings the original CoreOS spirit..
Two CoreOSes? The one being Fedora CoreOS and the other..?
oh, wow!
Did I miss something or bbcp seems a bit abandoned to itself?
+1 Used fdt to transfer a 6TB archive out of AWS very smoothly at full speed.
+1!
Glasnot. Glasnyet.
If u have a state-owned, state-run DNS service with a root zone and cooperation (forced or not) from ISPs, you really would not have to care about https, and if CT services are not reachable nobody would know.
I've been running CURRENT in production myself for about 2 years now. No problems so far.
+1 for the assertion about the destiny of CoreOS.
is this true?