Even without diving too deep into technical aspects (with the Load Balancing chapter being a good exception) there's plenty of good information around running large scale teams and systems. The concept of SRE is one of a kind and the details shared in the book help to understand how DevOps is not SRE and vice versa.
Last but not least such transparency is welcome and more big players should follow the example.
My first experience was with two servers only, so the obvious choice was to name them Beavis and Butthead.
Then the network grew and we decided to go with planets (keeping good ol' Beavis and Butthead).
After a while (a few years) the network grew again, and by that time, each location decided how to name their own servers.
Oh.. beavis and butthead are still breathing!
VNC is _totally_ firewall/NAT friendly... its one single port. You can even map diff. ports to diff computers running VNC inside the same NATed network (diff displays).
They were singing lemurs, "SpecOp" penguin team and the unique Foosas. Heard about some crazy animal inbetween too... but they just were plain new-yorkers.
kbear never got into any official KDE release. The instability of the project is full responsability of its author and the project itself seems dead for almost 2 years now.
Why did you have to mix kbear (as any other independent app) with KDE itself? Just because its made for KDE?
Would this mean that if I, eventually, developed a nice calculator for windows that says 2+2=69 instantly Windows would be so buggy that 2+2=69?
And about some RPM including last known name and version about the RPMs it depends on... it always worked that way, the problem was that you had to solve the dependency tree all by yourself -- something you don't have to do anymore if you use APT.
You should look for "Joel on Software" books about UI design. There you'd learn about "Acquiring Target" and how the top menu bar is actually a Good Thing (tm).
Its not just his opinion... Its very easy to understand, really.
Go to System Preferences -> Sharing, click on "Remote Login". Description says "Click Start to allow users of other computers to access this computer using SSH".
Hope this helps.
And in what does that have anything to do with a piece of software that just sniff console packets and injects the same packets remotely? If you're allowed to play on a LAN, hey... we're just helping people to be part of a bigger and wider LAN, nothing else...
Compare this to a mix of Messenger + VPN thing.
Google's Site Reliability Engineering was my favourite book of 2016.
Even without diving too deep into technical aspects (with the Load Balancing chapter being a good exception) there's plenty of good information around running large scale teams and systems. The concept of SRE is one of a kind and the details shared in the book help to understand how DevOps is not SRE and vice versa.
Last but not least such transparency is welcome and more big players should follow the example.
Have you tried Wolfram's Mathematica?
Not only it helped me take the required notes on every math related course but also helped solving/confirming many problems.
Not really saying if its cheap or overhead... just saying that it worked for me.
Cheers.
My first experience was with two servers only, so the obvious choice was to name them Beavis and Butthead. Then the network grew and we decided to go with planets (keeping good ol' Beavis and Butthead). After a while (a few years) the network grew again, and by that time, each location decided how to name their own servers. Oh.. beavis and butthead are still breathing!
Like they did last August, when they released the Mighty Mouse?
System Preferences -> Security: Enable "Use secure virtual memory"
I guess thats what that option is for, never tried though.
Its the Intel Core Duo, also known as Yonah.
:-)).
Its not Apple exclusive.
Can't tell you about the speed because I don't have one (yet
VNC is _totally_ firewall/NAT friendly... its one single port.
You can even map diff. ports to diff computers running VNC inside the same NATed network (diff displays).
I'm sorry if I don't understand what you mean.
We have 2 years warranty in Portugal.
Can't say about the rest of europe, but my guess is 1 year minimum.
They were singing lemurs, "SpecOp" penguin team and the unique Foosas. Heard about some crazy animal inbetween too... but they just were plain new-yorkers.
You can check that almost instantly by reading the release notes. Scroll down to "E.1.2. Migration to version 8.1"
Spotlight would be one...
We can see both (links and "Virtual Folders", known as Smart Folders) on Mac OS X Tiger.
kbear never got into any official KDE release. The instability of the project is full responsability of its author and the project itself seems dead for almost 2 years now.
Why did you have to mix kbear (as any other independent app) with KDE itself? Just because its made for KDE?
Would this mean that if I, eventually, developed a nice calculator for windows that says 2+2=69 instantly Windows would be so buggy that 2+2=69?
Maybe this can help you: APT-RPM.
And about some RPM including last known name and version about the RPMs it depends on... it always worked that way, the problem was that you had to solve the dependency tree all by yourself -- something you don't have to do anymore if you use APT.
The same as using C++...
So... you didn't knew there was Doom 3 for Mac?
Watch out, they're cathing up...
He has some of it online. Scroll down to "Tog invented the concept of the mile high menu bar...".
Cheers.
You should look for "Joel on Software" books about UI design. There you'd learn about "Acquiring Target" and how the top menu bar is actually a Good Thing (tm). Its not just his opinion... Its very easy to understand, really.
Theres an hyperlink to M$ PlayforSure.com music business lobby.
You can search for "iPod", but you won't get what you were expecting...
Is this legal in the US? They're using the well-known trademarked name to divert people to something else...
Try SubEtahEdit. Oh, and its Free for non-commercial use.
Cheers.
Go to System Preferences -> Sharing, click on "Remote Login". Description says "Click Start to allow users of other computers to access this computer using SSH". Hope this helps.
Here's what you need!
PS: I know its not PC hardware, but you'll have all the style you need.
And in what does that have anything to do with a piece of software that just sniff console packets and injects the same packets remotely? If you're allowed to play on a LAN, hey... we're just helping people to be part of a bigger and wider LAN, nothing else... Compare this to a mix of Messenger + VPN thing.
So... where is it?
Use APT and use Arjan's RPM repository. Cheers.