So for companies and servers, docker makes a lot of sense. Especially on the business side. For a private end user, these virtualization tools remove the potential performance all that fancy hardware nowadays could provide.
Excellent point!
Just another Reddit refugee
So for companies and servers, docker makes a lot of sense. Especially on the business side. For a private end user, these virtualization tools remove the potential performance all that fancy hardware nowadays could provide.
Excellent point!
This is the same coping mechanism as “just build another 4 lane highway. That should solve the traffic issues”. You are just shifting the problem.
You mean instead of downloading the app, we could just browse through them? That’s a revolutionary concept. We could call them hyper-apps!
rc = 0.5 horse + 0.5 rc ?
So basically a horse?
The internet has been ruthless with the CEO, but I’m not complaining
Reddit moment…wait no
The bot roasted the guy
CAPTCHA is the bare minimum. Who the hell turns it off?
If I had a user who wanted to run Linux then I knew that, on average, they were going to cause me a lot less headaches with random user issues
In my case, it’s the IT team which creates more issues for Linux users.
Whenever they change security policies, they never test it out on Linux and our connection goes down (some VPN/Firewall/DNS policy). It takes ages for us Linux users to convince them that we didn’t do any changes on our system and this problem is on their side.
I no longer waste time.
Because i have already broken all the company security policies.
Protip: convince the IT team that Linux is essential for your development work. Small percentage of the IT team is aware about security on Linux.
ah shit…here we go again
We just put the auditor under the floorboards whenever a new one arrives. Saves a lot of hassle. We have around 6 auditors stored this way.