- UvixThe people proposing it believe it to be to their own personal advantage. They don't necessarily believe it to be just and fair.
- Election cycles are unfortunately too long for that to work. Would need to reduce office terms to 2-3 months for "vote them out" to be viable.
- Our release notes are all internal.
Each user story has separate fields with summary information, testing notes, and technical information for developers. The release process pulls the information from the linked user stories into an Excel spreadsheet, and the non-technical users just ignore that column.
- I'd argue the real issue with Terraform is that workspace orchestration is necessary in the first place. If they addressed the performance issues with large workspaces, then we wouldn't need to split up workspaces and Terraform could just orchestrate changes naturally.
- I do believe Dun & Bradstreet was it. Thanks!
- Depends on the registrar. Globalsign required the phone number to be one publicly listed for the company in some business registry (I forget exactly which one), so it had to be someone in our main corporate office who'd deal with them on the phone.
- DDR4 manufacturing is being spun down due to lack of demand. The prices on it would be going up regardless of what's happening with DDR5.
- Certainly no more than three tiers.
"Traditional" three-tier, where you have a web server talking to an application server talking to a database server, seems like overkill; I'd get rid of the separate application tier.
If your tiers are browser, web API server, database: then three tiers still makes sense.
- Also ebooks and software installers, but those and movies/music are my main categories.
Cloud costs would be... exorbitant. 19 TB and I'm nowhere near done ripping my movies. Dropbox would be $96/month, Backblaze $114/month, and OneDrive won't let me buy that much capacity.
- I'm hosting a couple of apps in Docker on mine. (Pihole, Jellyfin, Audiobookshelf, and Bitwarden.)
- I wouldn't call TrueNAS, or anything where you're installing an OS on custom hardware, "turn-key". That's saved for the Synologys and UGREENs and Ubiquitis of the world.
- But not necessarily in the right form factor. My generalist PC build is a laptop, my gaming machine is tucked away under the TV and doesn't have a mouse or keyboard.
- Valve doesn't disclose ahead of purchase whether a title has Steam DRM or not. So even if publishers don't take the option, I have no way to know that. Which means the option effectively doesn't exist.
- Retailers will reject ever rounding down because they lose money, and customers will reject ever rounding up because they lose money.
- No, because they'd still be paying less/more than people paying with credit cards, debit cards, or checks.
- Yes, the article does list multiple root causes, including that one.
- CAs have to follow the baseline rules set by Google and Mozilla regarding incident response timelines. If they gave you more time, the browsers would drop them as a supported CA.
- Those are just the ones they're fixing. Versions <6.0 are still vulnerable, they're just not getting patched because they're out of support.
- On Linux, system-wide installations are handled through the system's package manager.
On Windows, if you have the "Install updates for other Microsoft products" option enabled, .NET [Core] runtimes will be updated through Windows Update.
If the domain's group policy won't let you turn it on from the UI (or if you want to turn it on programmatically for other reasons), the PowerShell 7 installer has a PowerShell script that can be adapted to do the trick: https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/blob/ba02868d0fa1d7...