walks into a casino Alright man, gimme the manuals to these bad boys right now, money ain’t gonna win itself.
walks into a casino Alright man, gimme the manuals to these bad boys right now, money ain’t gonna win itself.
They have plastic coating, yes, but way less plastic and way easier to just burn it off in the crucible.
I mean, if one is gullible enough to click the ad might aswell check the porn behind it 🤷
Imagine if it was check, and it bounced a week later and OP never realized, living his whole life thinking he didn’t get scammed.
But those ads did not really do much besides being annoying. I’ve never heard of anyone who went through those ads and continued - because, 99% of the time, it redirected to some shady site that absolutely didn’t play into the millionth customer shebang.
This website is deprecated.
It’s kept around mainly for historical reasons.
I’ve tried Docker Swarm because Kubernetes seemed like an overkill for a cluster of 4 small-ish servers. There have been several issues (networking for example) that took me two days to solve - by reinstalling the machine completely.
There are some hoops and hurdles along the way, some command will just literally brick your cluster without any notice whatsoever (like removing the second manager, leaving only one and cluster stops responding, but you get no warning that’s gonna happen).
Also secrets, where there is no simple way to manage them, or replace them. You can’t just replace a secret, you have to remove and recreate it. Which means turning off the service or creating a new secret with a different name and do a rolling update, which is just annoying to do every time unless you can afford a robust CI CD pipeline code that does it automatically.
Old Fashioned, when the bar is stocked enough and the barman knows, then Smoke & Cigars
Official documentation can, sadly, only contain so much information. Lots of tools are community driven and there are some niche uses of libraries that official docs don’t know about, or including them would just take up space.
Ooooh, I just checked and I am indeed not running the AIO. Must be a new thing, and I though I had it because I didn’t set up much, but I really just used a premare docker-compose.yml, which is why I didn’t remember any advanced setup. It still uses multiple containers.
I stand corrected.
What do you mean no internal IP? I can access the instance on my local network via RPI address no problem.
EDIT: Realized I didn’t use AIO. Sorry.
Probably because it’s easier to fuck up. With piping to xargs, you are forced to put the delete command last.
Theoretically, any registrar can hijack your domain.
So Overwatch 1?
Anyway, I loved that game. I haven’t touched OW2 yet and I am not planning to. Greed took over, they axed half the fun mechanics, and added a battle pass that plain sucks. Fuck that.
The point is they stay there
Spiders are okay, at least they hang around the ceiling. But this thing is giant and crawls on the floor and walls. No thanks.
Well, of course it’s harmless, it’s dead, SMH.
Confirmation button on the left, gray confirmation buttons, green cancel buttons (when the action you are performing is against the website, like subscription cancelation) or red cancel and gray confirmation.
Or hiding CTAs (like adding something to cart) under a hypertext rather than a button.
Different behavior for the same looking content (sometimes it redirects, sometimes it opens a new tab, sometimes it opens a modal).
Resetting forms on error - why the fuck do it need to fill it again?
Every single time. UI redrawing without user action is one of the worst UX antipatterns. It’s being punished for being too fast, yet too slow to click it in the timeframe where there is content you want to click on.
FOSS has nothing to do with security. Decentralization works as long as there are more good than bad actors, otherwise you got a recipe for disaster.
That’s what aliases / functions in .bashrc (or whatever shell you use) are for. You don’t need to always write the full code.
EDIT: Looks like .bashrc hurt you guys.