I would, if I used desktop Linux. I sort of do on my homelab sort of setup, but I'm specifically using Raspberry Pi OS because, well, my homelab is something like 30 raspberry pi's doing various things (yes, I know this…
An in-house cloud will just be a bunch of commodity servers running a hypervisor that gives you an API that allows you to automate the provisioning of infrastructure. I am guessing that in the 80s you weren't writing…
Ubuntu was nice because, when it came out, Debian was several years out of date without having done a release. Ubuntu promised to do smaller, incremental releases and do LTS versions as well which is a promise they have…
I would, if I used desktop Linux. I sort of do on my homelab sort of setup, but I'm specifically using Raspberry Pi OS because, well, my homelab is something like 30 raspberry pi's doing various things (yes, I know this…
An in-house cloud will just be a bunch of commodity servers running a hypervisor that gives you an API that allows you to automate the provisioning of infrastructure. I am guessing that in the 80s you weren't writing…
Ubuntu was nice because, when it came out, Debian was several years out of date without having done a release. Ubuntu promised to do smaller, incremental releases and do LTS versions as well which is a promise they have…