What your proposing is exactly why India did this. They see the blanket ban coming and want to ensure they get a seat at the table of have's instead of being pushed into the have-not's and can't ever have pile.
As long as all my books rest in my calibre library, they are safe. No DRM and access from anywhere. I can pull up my library on any browser and it caches the book locally so I can read in an excellent e-reader web application.
I usually just pull the copy to my phone and read it in my phone app, but it's nice to have options.
And, once a bug is fixed, it's fixed; never to be reintroduced or worried about again.
I imagine a future where instead of one car misjudging a turn and crashing you'll have a line of cars all doing it, sliding into the ditch one after the other...
It's easy to think your the only person whose story matters and everyone else is just a bit player. I think even you can admit there are afew people around you who exhibit the traits your bemoaning the lack of.
Is it so hard to understand that other people have those traits too, your just not connected to them enough to see it? Make yourself a better person, it's hard, but it's worth it.
I would argue that's less true for the Civil War. The North won and wandered off the field. The South has stayed on the field and spent over a century slowly rewriting history, with pretty good results.
There was no "war of Northern aggression". The south fired first, and fought nastiest. The North simply woke up and finished the fight. Same with the "Revolution". England started violence, and woke a sleeping giant.
There are many European cities at the same latitude as Canadian cities, yet a much more temperate climate. I think this is due to ocean currents, which are bound to change when we modify the globes temperature.
Yes, I used to use Ubuntu occasionally because packages weren't as available on OpenSUSE. However, that's really changed over the last decade. With OBS (open build services), you can find most packages in a repo.
Three reasons I really prefer OpenSUSE: 1 - Hardware support is unsurpassed, better then any other linux distro I've tried. 2 - OBS ecosystem 3 - Community help appears to be higher caliber then Ubuntu and professional pages are more open then RH (no paywall). If I look up a howto, at least half the time the Ubuntu directions will use some GUI tool I don't have on the cli, or include something suspicious like chmod 777. The directions you find on OpenSUSE usually don't have this problem, and YAST on GUI is the same as YAST on cli.
Replying to myself, but I've never had issues with minor or major version upgrades using zypper. Well, I have on Tumbleweed, but that's to be expected.
LEAP has support for 36 months (major versions) and 18 months (minor releases). It's a different upgrade cycle then CentOS or RH. In RH, if you just pull from the repos, you will automatically roll from minor to minor release. This is not the case with OpenSuse. For example, 15.0 repos are distinct and separate from 15.1. In RH, both versions would be in the same repo and Yum finds the most current.
This gives you a bit more control, you have 6 months to upgrade between minor version as they are generally release every 12 months and supported for 18. You have to run a different command to upgrade the version zypper dup vs zypper up. In RH your version will increment without you noticing if your not paying attention.
IMHO, the biggest differentiator is the the Kernel Version. RedHat's is pretty old, the newest kernel the ship is 3.10.0-957. The SLE kernel (note the change from SLES 12 to SLE 15 - to track OpenSUSE better) is 4.12.14-23.1.
You have to go all the way back to 2014 to get a 3.12 kernel on SuSe.
I'm a big fan of SUSE, I use OpenSUSE at home and have managed some HPC systems that use SLES 11/12, but most systems I manage us RH at work.
They may be laying off chaff (probably), but legally they are required to lay off old and young chaff equally. This lawsuit contends they picked older chaff in favor of younger chaff, which is not legal.
Bill is not a troll, just misinformed and leans libertarian. He doesn't understand simple concepts like wisdom and life balance. Don't be too hard on him.
This is the correct answer, minus the shouting. The parent is talking about owning the hardware/software running the cloud, not access to the resources.
Mindstorm, scratch..
What your proposing is exactly why India did this. They see the blanket ban coming and want to ensure they get a seat at the table of have's instead of being pushed into the have-not's and can't ever have pile.
This is about anti-trust collusion. It's a classic case.
As long as all my books rest in my calibre library, they are safe. No DRM and access from anywhere. I can pull up my library on any browser and it caches the book locally so I can read in an excellent e-reader web application.
I usually just pull the copy to my phone and read it in my phone app, but it's nice to have options.
I just use calibre and my phone (fbreader if your curious). I can read wherever I want, and listen to the books with TTS if I'm driving.
And, once a bug is fixed, it's fixed; never to be reintroduced or worried about again.
I imagine a future where instead of one car misjudging a turn and crashing you'll have a line of cars all doing it, sliding into the ditch one after the other...
It's easy to think your the only person whose story matters and everyone else is just a bit player. I think even you can admit there are afew people around you who exhibit the traits your bemoaning the lack of.
Is it so hard to understand that other people have those traits too, your just not connected to them enough to see it?
Make yourself a better person, it's hard, but it's worth it.
I would argue that's less true for the Civil War. The North won and wandered off the field. The South has stayed on the field and spent over a century slowly rewriting history, with pretty good results.
Just gonna' leave this here...
There was no "war of Northern aggression". The south fired first, and fought nastiest. The North simply woke up and finished the fight. Same with the "Revolution". England started violence, and woke a sleeping giant.
There are many European cities at the same latitude as Canadian cities, yet a much more temperate climate. I think this is due to ocean currents, which are bound to change when we modify the globes temperature.
Yes, I used to use Ubuntu occasionally because packages weren't as available on OpenSUSE. However, that's really changed over the last decade. With OBS (open build services), you can find most packages in a repo.
Three reasons I really prefer OpenSUSE:
1 - Hardware support is unsurpassed, better then any other linux distro I've tried.
2 - OBS ecosystem
3 - Community help appears to be higher caliber then Ubuntu and professional pages are more open then RH (no paywall). If I look up a howto, at least half the time the Ubuntu directions will use some GUI tool I don't have on the cli, or include something suspicious like chmod 777. The directions you find on OpenSUSE usually don't have this problem, and YAST on GUI is the same as YAST on cli.
Replying to myself, but I've never had issues with minor or major version upgrades using zypper.
Well, I have on Tumbleweed, but that's to be expected.
OpenSuse LEAP had SLES components rolled in on version 42.1, which was superseded by version 15.
LEAP has support for 36 months (major versions) and 18 months (minor releases). It's a different upgrade cycle then CentOS or RH. In RH, if you just pull from the repos, you will automatically roll from minor to minor release. This is not the case with OpenSuse. For example, 15.0 repos are distinct and separate from 15.1. In RH, both versions would be in the same repo and Yum finds the most current.
This gives you a bit more control, you have 6 months to upgrade between minor version as they are generally release every 12 months and supported for 18. You have to run a different command to upgrade the version zypper dup vs zypper up. In RH your version will increment without you noticing if your not paying attention.
IMHO, the biggest differentiator is the the Kernel Version.
RedHat's is pretty old, the newest kernel the ship is 3.10.0-957.
The SLE kernel (note the change from SLES 12 to SLE 15 - to track OpenSUSE better) is 4.12.14-23.1.
You have to go all the way back to 2014 to get a 3.12 kernel on SuSe.
I'm a big fan of SUSE, I use OpenSUSE at home and have managed some HPC systems that use SLES 11/12, but most systems I manage us RH at work.
I don't have an accountant, planner, or lawyer out of prison and neither does the majority, especially poor majority, in America.
I wondered why his hair looked so fake. I just chalked it up to eccentricity.
An excellent read on the state of Missile defense.
I think they'd offer a wireless trunk, which is basically a little robot that follows you around.
They may be laying off chaff (probably), but legally they are required to lay off old and young chaff equally. This lawsuit contends they picked older chaff in favor of younger chaff, which is not legal.
GoDaddy founder was 47, when he started Jomax, but over 50 when it became GoDaddy.
Bill is not a troll, just misinformed and leans libertarian. He doesn't understand simple concepts like wisdom and life balance. Don't be too hard on him.
You just outlined what right to repair is asking for, manuals & access to spare parts.
Is parent and idiot or ignorant? You be the judge. I'm guessing both.
The Irish famine was caused by capitalism as practiced by the British.
We too have a "private access" section of our cloud, parent was talking about running the cloud on-prem.
This is the correct answer, minus the shouting. The parent is talking about owning the hardware/software running the cloud, not access to the resources.