I worked on Caldera Open Linux. It was a tough merge, Caldera taking over our shop, but the work was good and valuable and we derived a lot of pride from solving tricky issues. Working with the company Caldera bought (on DrDos Lawsuit money) remains, decades later, my best working experience ever.
It's nice to see it was occasionally magical on the outside.
Street view should be made illegal in general. There are no legitimate plus sides of it.
I use it to check where parking lots open onto the street, where some buildings have their facing/entrances, check street numbers to confirm that bakery IS closed and it's a tax prep office now, etc.
GMaps sat-view is horribly out of date - my apartment still doesn't exist after 5 years - but street-view is fantastic sometimes.
assume they have multiple of these displays around and for them it would make more sense to use something more centralized, like zabbix
The one I saw a decade ago yielded SNMP to solarwinds (I know I know) rather well, but they mainly used PING on it to see when the radio link died.
Fancy that -- when the parks n rec sites were converted to e-billboards, they had power but no net line, and "radio's fine". Show me an old linux billboard host and I'll show you a canvas my inner child can't wait to e-graffiti.
It's been for a while. It's cheap and easily-embeddable with a proper network stack for remote management. It's a decade at least, but I can only gauge since I first saw a net guy in an adjacent desk fighting with a parks n rec guy over one not working.
Ah, back in the days before Lennart and RHEL killed linux.
Having only run debian for a job interview - where I had to learn systemd and I fucking crushed it, woo - I would never have picked out that makefile line. Kudos.
Having run automation in 2002 based on package triggers, makefile, cron and awk, I completely approve of using makefiles to orchestrate startup. That's actually genius.
One quick point here. @MicroWave@lemmy.world 's link in the write-up is to a piece in the Independent that has a short paragraph on each of the 6 missing-presumed-dead victims of this accident.
It's not usually possible to monetize this kind of background work, and i suspect most papers will skip the effort for that reason. But kudos to the Independent for giving us a face and a story to all of the names of the victims that people still couldn't save. Keep us to task, and remind us how we could have been better, and show us personally why. This is the mirror we need sometimes.
What appeals court is going to throw out a conviction because the judge tried to protect themselves and the prosecution from political violence instigated by the defendant?
If their luck doesn't hold, and they get another judge whom we know values politics over the law but hasn't been impeached yet, they want to make sure to leave as little to interpretation as possible.
I feel I should caution you about something that can be misread as a plan to incite homicide or harm against a current or former president of a war-like nation. The American FBI has taken people from other countries, for a long time, and for less justification. Especially people living within 100mi of their northern or southern border are at added risk of a misunderstood heckling jab being interpreted as any kind of threat.
#freeSpeech and all, but we also don't draw cartoons of a certain deity for fear of a fiery doom.
Agreed. I admit I may be looking for a reason to justifiably put him on ice for a bit, but I'm astounded at the restraint of a judge when a figure with a history of weaponizing hillbillies targets someone uninvolved in the current case. Even mafia didn't target the innocent relatives of doomed wiseguys.
promise my mum to off her in case she ever [gets] dementia
My dad has what we call a 'DNR' order after his time as an EMT prolonging the life of some elderly people who didn't. He also now has a 'living will' after an affliction that will kill him in the next decade and is not feasibly preventable. Before his brain is too far gone from oxygen deprivation and he can't be judged fit to make the call, he's got provisions and criteria to end his life. He still had to meet with a psyche to ensure it's what he wanted, a blessing since a former EMT who's worked on the Water has more than enough information and no need to ask permission.
I worked on Caldera Open Linux. It was a tough merge, Caldera taking over our shop, but the work was good and valuable and we derived a lot of pride from solving tricky issues. Working with the company Caldera bought (on DrDos Lawsuit money) remains, decades later, my best working experience ever.
It's nice to see it was occasionally magical on the outside.