At Userify (https://userify.com), we offer a free tier for SSH key and user management for up to 20 servers free (billing doesn't begin until 21 servers) with our SaaS offering (versus 10 free for our on-premise…
> for some established language, like Rust. Working on a "young" language, you just miss the chance of contributing to an ecosystem that's already been in development for quite some time Would you still make this point…
Nim is an amazing language. The syntax is cleaner (IMO) and easier-to-read than Go and approaches Python in its readability, which is impressive for a statically typed, compiled language[0]. The design is focused on…
You don't really 'introduce non-determinism'. That's like saying, "why did you introduce entropy?" It's there. It happens, and it's difficult to get rid of in any complex system.…
> .. this quickly gets into grey areas and situations where the right amount of suppression of ideas gets tricky. "Suppression of ideas" is a grey area? I have no words.
>> But, who is we in this case? And what specifically are some things and how narrowly are they defined? > We is you, me, and society at large. But that is not who would be passing judgment in this brave new world of…
> There will always be some probability of error but we needn’t be afraid to declare some things dangerous and wrong. But, who is we in this case? And what specifically are some things and how narrowly are they defined?…
Although this is all possible and perhaps even more plausible than the alternative, it's still more fun and conspiratorial to view Google as the new Evil Empire, so I'll just keep doing that, thanks.
> even if people would abuse it, you kicking them is a few clicks away We take a pretty liberal approach to this :) there are a few companies on the platform now who just create a lot of companies and keep them all…
We do something similar to this at Userify / ssh key management (disclaimer: I'm the founder/CEO): We give away 20 servers for free -- no invoice, no credit card needed, nothing. Once you exceed 20 servers, we charge…
Here's mine. I just use vim for this in a single file. Everything is designed to be rapidly searchable and make navigation just a few keystrokes. https://github.com/jamiesonbecker/organization-system Vim is powerful..…
>Sherlock and Batman Sounds awesome.
Tragic and ironic that we need a libre Firefox.
@moderators should probably be marked [2013]
The most interesting (and tragic) part of this, to me, is not that ZFS is being rebased from Illumos (open source Solaris) to ZFS on Linux: ... it's that Solaris is effectively finished as an OS. It's not even its own…
IT administrators failed to install an intrusion detection and prevention system --also known as an antivirus or security product. The conflation of two totally different categories of products decreases the credibility…
The title is factually incorrect: the iceberg didn't hit the Titanic. The historical record clearly indicates that it was just chillin' out.
OpenSSH was forked from the original SSH (version 1) code by Tatu Ylönen after it went closed source in the mid-1990's IIRC. https://www.openssh.com/history.html
This is pretty awesome news.. for the last few months, we've been working on porting the Userify shim (but not currently the server) to Windows. This will work exactly as it does on Linux (and the shim will continue to…
At Userify (https://userify.com), we offer a free tier for SSH key and user management for up to 20 servers free (billing doesn't begin until 21 servers) with our SaaS offering (versus 10 free for our on-premise…
> for some established language, like Rust. Working on a "young" language, you just miss the chance of contributing to an ecosystem that's already been in development for quite some time Would you still make this point…
Nim is an amazing language. The syntax is cleaner (IMO) and easier-to-read than Go and approaches Python in its readability, which is impressive for a statically typed, compiled language[0]. The design is focused on…
You don't really 'introduce non-determinism'. That's like saying, "why did you introduce entropy?" It's there. It happens, and it's difficult to get rid of in any complex system.…
> .. this quickly gets into grey areas and situations where the right amount of suppression of ideas gets tricky. "Suppression of ideas" is a grey area? I have no words.
>> But, who is we in this case? And what specifically are some things and how narrowly are they defined? > We is you, me, and society at large. But that is not who would be passing judgment in this brave new world of…
> There will always be some probability of error but we needn’t be afraid to declare some things dangerous and wrong. But, who is we in this case? And what specifically are some things and how narrowly are they defined?…
Although this is all possible and perhaps even more plausible than the alternative, it's still more fun and conspiratorial to view Google as the new Evil Empire, so I'll just keep doing that, thanks.
> even if people would abuse it, you kicking them is a few clicks away We take a pretty liberal approach to this :) there are a few companies on the platform now who just create a lot of companies and keep them all…
We do something similar to this at Userify / ssh key management (disclaimer: I'm the founder/CEO): We give away 20 servers for free -- no invoice, no credit card needed, nothing. Once you exceed 20 servers, we charge…
Here's mine. I just use vim for this in a single file. Everything is designed to be rapidly searchable and make navigation just a few keystrokes. https://github.com/jamiesonbecker/organization-system Vim is powerful..…
>Sherlock and Batman Sounds awesome.
Tragic and ironic that we need a libre Firefox.
@moderators should probably be marked [2013]
The most interesting (and tragic) part of this, to me, is not that ZFS is being rebased from Illumos (open source Solaris) to ZFS on Linux: ... it's that Solaris is effectively finished as an OS. It's not even its own…
IT administrators failed to install an intrusion detection and prevention system --also known as an antivirus or security product. The conflation of two totally different categories of products decreases the credibility…
The title is factually incorrect: the iceberg didn't hit the Titanic. The historical record clearly indicates that it was just chillin' out.
OpenSSH was forked from the original SSH (version 1) code by Tatu Ylönen after it went closed source in the mid-1990's IIRC. https://www.openssh.com/history.html
This is pretty awesome news.. for the last few months, we've been working on porting the Userify shim (but not currently the server) to Windows. This will work exactly as it does on Linux (and the shim will continue to…