It's totally fine to bulk replace some sensitive things like specifically sensitive information with "replace all" as long as it doesn't break parsing which happens with inconsistency. Like if you have a server named "Lewis-Hamiltons-Dns-sequence“ maybe bulk rename that so is still clear "customer-1112221-appdata".
But try to differentiate 'am I ashamed' or 'this is sensitive and leaking it would cause either a PII exfiltration risk or security risk' since only one of these is legitimate.
Note, if I can find that information with dns lookup, and dns scraping, that's not sensitive. If you're my customer and you're hiding your name, that I already invoice, that's probably only making me suspicious if those logs are even yours.
Just fyi, as a sysadmin, I never want logs tampered with. I import them filter them and the important parts will be analysed no matter how much filller debugging and info level stuff is there.
Same with network captures. Modified pcaps are worse than garbage.
Just include everything.
Sorry you had a bad experience. The customer service side is kind of unrelated to the technical practice side though.
Start realising that the way you're used to scrolling with your mouse wheel, is a cog between you and the service it's moving. Actually you were using natural all along. It was the early touch pads that were wrong and nonsense.
Look it depends on the age of the car, but let's take an old manual car for example.
On those cars, there's a fuel map to rpm. There's actually a few maps including throttle and ignition timing. But think of a spreadsheet of rpm and fuel at a certain throttle load.
At 0 throttle: The map says to stop the engine from stealing at under say 800 rpm it needs to have fuel added at rpms lower than that to speed up the engine to avoid stalling. At 800rpm it needs a consistent amount kind of a known amount that keeps it in equilibrium. At over 800rpm it needs less fuel the more rpm it has over the idle 800rpm until it's zero fuel.
And you'll feel that, you'll feel that moment the car starts adding fuel because if you're only engine braking to a stop your car will get near that idle rpm and your engine will start adding power to avoid a stall, and your braking will diminish.
If you take an engine out of a car and try to spin it by turning the crank shaft, it will be hard to turn because the cylinders need to compress air (it's required before adding fuel and spark to explode that compressed air so it expands).
When that engine is in the car, and you don't add fuel and spark, then the cars wheels have to turn the engine and compress that air, thousands of times per minute. That force that the wheels have to send to the engine to spin that engine slows you down.
I'm thinking you think the engine itself has a brake on it.. No.
Personally, it's the power of powershell that I use for the hundreds of windows servers. Otherwise it's the power of Linux bash shell scripts for the dozens of Linux servers. None of the Linux servers run a gui so there's no options there. Tbh for me, self documenting gui is the slowest way to do work. Configuring hundreds at once with peer reviewed scripts and change control is much more effective since the peer review and change control will be needed either way.
Oh though I use fortimanager a lot of configuring dozens of Fortigates. Only have a few scripts on it though.
Can I ask: if you rent or buy, say for example, a 2 bedroom unit, and then use a whole bedroom for the computer, would you compare the cost of the rental/purchase to a 1br unit and associate that cost difference just for the computer, to the cost of building that pc?
(that's a long sentence sorry)
I think your build just became a lot more expensive.
Stupid take to be honest, real people getting trafficked and stalked, domestic abuse victims being tracked for control by the abuser, and you think that's fine because google has that data about you even though nobody can use it so why shouldn't all apps be able to? Go to a women's shelter, touch grass.
This issue is far more nuanced. No it's not good Google has that data on you.
No it's not fair that automatons caused a small developer to have their entire amount destroyed without a proper review.
There's information about it for I think plex and handbrake and ffmpeg in general. This is how some people do real time transcoding for media servers. But I'm not an expert. I just hope you can be guided with easier search terms.
Hi, I run pop! Os for about a year on a mac book pro 2012. My biggest hassles are Bluetooth audio sucks (glitchy) and I had to install a wireless driver to get wireless to work at all. Other than that, it's working exactly as expected. Can recommend. It can't game, it can't play videos well because the inbuilt speakers suck (and the Bluetooth audio is glitchy), but it's plenty performant for my actual tasks. Runs smooth. I'm sure most distributions will.
Many large discoveries by research in Australia in universities and CSIRO didn't get funding they needed in Australia, and the engineers and researchers simply found funding and moved to the United States. Then the US benefited from all that education and university research investment simply because the economy and startup funding was better.
I guess you know America is on a downturn if they see the same thing happening to them.
I can guess at some things but let me first start with what I think is happening:
You have a gateway set. Your device sends a broadcast arp message asking 'who has ip ' and the device with that ip is supposed to send back 'me with this mac address!'.
That device is either sending it so slowly that your machine says 'I can't go past the gateway, the gateway isn't responding' which in your error message is no route to host.
Assuming that you have no custom manual network route in play.
So things that can cause that are usually link layer and layer two issues and sometimes duplicate IPs. Two devices with the gateway ip.
You should watch your mac address table and arp table (arp a) and watch if the router gateway disappears or changes Mac addresses.
Don't feel bad because you're really good at using a tool that doesn't follow your values. I use Windows during the work week and I use Linux for gaming on the weekend where I literally can't work even if I wanted to.
For me Windows is a tool box with propriatry tools that have no Linux compatibility. That's OK for me. People get emotionally invested but that's neither healthy nor helpful. No point being angry at work, it's like being angry that your work uniform is made by one textiles vendor not the other.
You get to choose what you use at home in your own time. If you feel good using Linux then, do it!
I'm a vegan.