We’re expecting number three in August. FWIW, number two was a lot easier for us.
While I can’t categorically say it gets better with time, it has for me. I have an 18 month old and an almost three year old. I’m back to quasi-normal sleep now. I do wish we had kids when we were younger (I’m 37), but…
You beat me to the punch. I fully abandoned Google and Facebook over two years ago. No regrets.
The randomly assigned ip every reboot is extremely annoying.
I guess I should have been more verbose in my original comment. Windows is hot garbage, but there hardly exists a good reason for dual booting. Use a Windows VM from Linux if you can, WSL2 from Windows if you must.
While I agree, that doesn’t mean that dual booting is the solution. My daily is Fedora Workstation and I have a Windows vm for stuff as needed.
With the recent advances in WSL2, I’d say dual booting is hardly worth the effort anymore. This is assuming you need Windows.
If you need direct access to the host, it’s probably a non production environment or you’re doing containers wrong. Kubernetes clusters provisioned with Terraform, for example, should almost never require ssh access to…
You’re correct. All the traffic should be routed to the nginx endpoint and the host should be vanilla.
We’re expecting number three in August. FWIW, number two was a lot easier for us.
While I can’t categorically say it gets better with time, it has for me. I have an 18 month old and an almost three year old. I’m back to quasi-normal sleep now. I do wish we had kids when we were younger (I’m 37), but…
You beat me to the punch. I fully abandoned Google and Facebook over two years ago. No regrets.
The randomly assigned ip every reboot is extremely annoying.
I guess I should have been more verbose in my original comment. Windows is hot garbage, but there hardly exists a good reason for dual booting. Use a Windows VM from Linux if you can, WSL2 from Windows if you must.
While I agree, that doesn’t mean that dual booting is the solution. My daily is Fedora Workstation and I have a Windows vm for stuff as needed.
With the recent advances in WSL2, I’d say dual booting is hardly worth the effort anymore. This is assuming you need Windows.
If you need direct access to the host, it’s probably a non production environment or you’re doing containers wrong. Kubernetes clusters provisioned with Terraform, for example, should almost never require ssh access to…
You’re correct. All the traffic should be routed to the nginx endpoint and the host should be vanilla.