- Joined
- Apr 19, 2021
Maybe this recent decision will make them go the way of Solaris.Naturally, I do want Red Hat to burn, if only so the constant stream of Poetterware-lite stops for a little while. Keeping my hope alive.
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Maybe this recent decision will make them go the way of Solaris.Naturally, I do want Red Hat to burn, if only so the constant stream of Poetterware-lite stops for a little while. Keeping my hope alive.
I actually miss Solaris.Maybe this recent decision will make them go the way of Solaris.
The open source version is called Illumos. Terry Davis was right again, run over glowing niggers in the dark.I actually miss Solaris.
The impression I get is that Red Hat is trying to "standardize," as a process to increase market share. Realistically this may be necessary to defeat the Windows monopoly.
More and more server crap is moving towards containers, which means the underlying server OS is becoming less and less relevant as the developers can use whatever Base OS/Libraries and other crap they want in the container.
Or even close to it except maybe shortly after Novell died. IMO the only really solid server OSes MS ever had were NT 3.5.1 and 4.Windows hasn't been a monopoly in the server space for ages.
It's only used to turn on or off a smart switch with the speakers plugged in, it could run when the user session is started or ended and on sleep wake.You can write a normal systemd service and specify User and Group under the [Service] header.
You could also use a user service, just be aware it’ll only run when that user is logged in, not when the system boots.
For the first example you typically wouldn’t use your user account to run this thing, you’d make a kasa service account for this specific service.
So you want to control the switch when a computer boots and shuts down? You could try using Homeassistant. There's a native tp link kasa integration that would give you more granular control of your automations.It's only used to turn on or off a smart switch with the speakers plugged in, it could run when the user session is started or ended and on sleep wake.
That looks interesting, but since I literally just need to turn a smart plug with a python app off and on homeassistant would be like hiring a servent to turn your bedroom lights off when you go to bed when you could just use a long stick. I'll try to figure out systemd more, I just got home from vacation and trying to get organized so I haven't been able to focus on this problem as well yet.So you want to control the switch when a computer boots and shuts down? You could try using Homeassistant. There's a native tp link kasa integration that would give you more granular control of your automations.
I'm visualizing the venn diagram of "people why buy overpriced mac hardware" and "people who insist on running linux" and, well I'm surprised they intersect.We keep winning, Fedorabros.
Not running this shit if it has Hector Martin's grubby fingers all over it from the Asahi Linux project.
Hello.I'm visualizing the venn diagram of "people why buy overpriced mac hardware" and "people who insist on running linux" and, well I'm surprised they intersect.
they literally had multiple generations of laptops with shitty butterfly keyboards that are rendered unusable by dust, and a model that committed seppeku if you opened the display with just a teeny bit too much force.Hello.
Apple are currently making the best laptops by a considerable margin, but even before the switch to Apple Silicon they were very high quality compared to the garbage you have to tolerate buying windows laptops. Good displays, good keyboards, superb trackpads, decent battery life, and slim. For software development I prefer having the project folder on my NAS, connected over Wireguard from my laptop, where I use VSCode and ssh under macOS to do all the actual work while the (Linux) workstation I’m controlling with ssh builds etc on the NAS project folder.
And all the nice extra-bulgy batteries over the years.they literally had multiple generations of laptops with keyboards that are rendered unusable by dust, and a model that committed seppeku if you opened the display with just a teeny bit too much force.
Would anyone really shill for free on the Internet. Just go an obscure Internet gossip forum and shill for a trillion dollar megacorp for absolutely FREE.Hello.
Apple are currently making the best laptops by a considerable margin, but even before the switch to Apple Silicon they were very high quality compared to the garbage you have to tolerate buying windows laptops. Good displays, good keyboards, superb trackpads, decent battery life, and slim. For software development I prefer having the project folder on my NAS, connected over Wireguard from my laptop, where I use VSCode and ssh under macOS to do all the actual work while the (Linux) workstation I’m controlling with ssh builds etc on the NAS project folder.
Wasn't the original topic Macs, not Dells?And all the nice extra-bulgy batteries over the years.
The original topic is Linux. Try to keep up.Wasn't the original topic Macs, not Dells?