Fedora Linux 42 released
folekaule @ folekaule @lemmy.world Posts 0Comments 154Joined 2 yr. ago
See if a light weight kubernetes installation is for you. Secrets are first class citizens in k8s. You can maintain secrets in a number of different ways, but they are exposed to containers the same way. They can become files or environment variables, whether you need.
I recommend looking at k3s to run on your Pi and see if that works for you. You can add vault software on top of that later without changing your containers.
Thank you for replying, very informative. I think I have most of the actions/types I wanted associated with my preferred ones now. The most noticeable one is Firefox when I open downloads from the menu. I'm not sure if Firefox uses xdg or not? I don't mind GTK or Gnome at all, in fact I probably have spent more time on Gnome, but I do like when things are consistent.
Looking forward to this. I do have a question for the more seasoned people here: I installed Fedora 41 not too long after its release on a new PC, which has been my daily driver every since. Very happy with it, tweaked everything to my liking. However, by mistake I installed Workstation (with Gnome) and then switched to my preferred KDE Plasma as the DE. This has left some corners of my system with the Gnome look and feel, which is fine, but I prefer if it were more consistent.
My question:
- Can I/do you recommend that I upgrade Fedora in place? I prefer this if it means I don't have to reinstall everything.
- Or do you recommend I do a fresh install anyway for a clean upgrade and at the same time clean up my DE? What is the least disruptive way to do this?
No offense taken at all. I just agree it's a sad state of affairs.
I don't mean to be a doomer and I do try to give my kids more than a black and white picture. I'm not a parent who tells them to just suck it up. I support them every step of the way.
But I do try to keep their expectations realistic. I think it's fair to let them know that what they see in glossy college ads isn't typical.
Finding a job you actually like can be hard. Working 40 hours a week can be hard. But eventually you will manage it. It's not glamorous, but it pays the rent.
Usually you have to play the cards you were dealt while you look for better opportunities. Few people can afford to be out of work for a long time. I consider myself very lucky to be able to sit here right now and discuss work/life balance on Lemmy, rather than trolling the Internet for jobs.
Yes, it is. But it's the reality of being a working stiff in America today.
I have a kid who's just starting full time work out of college. I'll tell you what I told them: you'll get used to it. You will eventually settle into the habit and it becomes routine.
However, there will be tough times where you need to work hard to motivate yourself to go to work. Those happen.
What works for me during those times is the same that works for me exercising (which I hate): one step, one mile, one day at a time. Tell yourself it's just one more day to the weekend or to vacation. Have something to look forward to.
Burnout also happens. What works for me there, is to draw an absolutely strict line between work and life. You need to fight for your work/life balance. Maintain friendships outside the office.
When you're not working, try to do something not related at all to work. If that's working on improving your health, that's even better. A healthy body and healthy mind has more energy. Do literally anything except working or thinking about work. If you can't turn it off, practice setting boundaries until you can.
Finally, and this surprised me as I realized that all the stupid corny stuff we do in the office: luncheons, raffles, TGIF, "just another day in paradise", and that, are coping mechanisms. Play along, but don't get sucked into a negativity spiral. Humor can be a great stress reliever, but watch out for HR watchdogs.
Are you telling me Beowulf clusters are back?
Jokes aside, it depends what you want to do. You can't really build one powerful gaming PC out of multiple, but your can run parallel workloads in a number of different ways. What exactly, comes down to what you're doing. A kubernetes cluster is different from a Blender render farm, for example.
As others mentioned you can just remote into the servers with ssh, vnc, rdp, etc. if you want physical displays on them, you can look for a cheap KVM which lets you control multiple PCs with one keyboard, monitor, and mouse.
A degree will help you get in the door and it will teach you the theory behind the practice, which is helpful for the problem solving parts.
Other than that, read good code and write lots of code, even if it's crap, as long as you're learning from your mistakes. Experiment and venture outside your comfort zone. Don't focus too much on leet coding.
Contribute to open source if you can. I'm always happy to see a candidate with a solid GitHub profile, where I can see actual code that they wrote. It will also teach you to collaborate with others.
But mostly: stay curious, and don't stop learning.
Instead of calling tech support they should have checked on expertsexchange.com first.
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This is not correct.
If you compile GPL licensed code and distribute the binaries, you are still obligated to make that source available under the same license, with your changes.
In the case of GPL, but not all open source licenses, this even applies if you link to (compile with) the GPL code from your own. The MIT license on the other hand, comes with almost no obligations.
What RedHat and others do is add support, services, and their own proprietary programs on top of the open source. The open source parts of that distro is and always will be free as in both beer and speech.
The non-free packages are often distributed via separate repositories to make the distinction clear.
That is just one way to fund open source software and is sometimes referred to as the RedHat model.
What OP is asking about is the donation model to fund software. You're not required to donate, but if you enjoy the software and you can afford it, then there is your opportunity to give back.
As someone else pointed out, hosting and bandwidth isn't free, so it's important for these projects to find some revenue stream to pay for that.
The distinction is between bare metal and virtual machine. Most cloud deployments will be hosted in a virtual machine, inside which you host your containers.
So the nested dolls go:
- bare metal (directly on hardware)
- virtual machine (inside a hypervisor)
- container (inside Docker, podman, containers, etc.)
- runtime (jvm, v8, clr, etc) (unless your code is in C, Rust, or other such language)
- your code
That's a feature not a bug. If tariffs increase import prices by 10%, people are less likely to notice a 15% increase at the point of sale. Not to mention domestic products that despite not being subject to tariffs will still increase in price to come in just below imports.
All of this is designed to put more money in the oligarchs' pockets.
Communicating with AI becomes indistinguishable from human contact, unless it's face-to-face. While promising to solve the loneliness epidemic and provide safe and effective therapy for anyone who wants it, it also unleashes a torrent of convincing AI propaganda. Technocrats using AI and charismatic humans as useful idiots and a front, effectively rule the world. Most people are poor and go hungry, but resistance is futile. There is no safe way to communicate except meeting in person, and there are few safe spaces to even meet that aren't under constant surveillance. Organizing any resistance is incredibly difficult, if not hopeless. Truth is no more.
HostGator. They raised their prices by quite a bit last time I renewed. So I contacted them and complained. After a while they came back with a "special" offer to renew at the old price but I had to accept it right then. I felt like I wasn't gonna get a better deal and it wasn't my money anyway, so I accepted.
Got the price they offered but they renewed it two months ahead of when it was due, so it ended up costing the same anyway, because now it will be up for renewal sooner. I will be moving away from them before the next renewal.
TL;DR: HostGator can fuck right off
After getting fed up with Windows I finally returned to Linux desktop as my daily driver. I have used Linux for servers and to keep old computers usable just a little longer, but I couldn't make the switch because I used Adobe and played games.
So, with I finally had enough and switched to Fedora, arguably a boring distro, I was pleasantly surprised how well my games run on it. The killer feature is that it gets out of my way and it just works.
I owe Valve a lot of gratitude for putting all that work into making gaming work on Linux. I could not have switched without it. I hope the trend continues.
I create a cron job with something like: docker system prune -af --filter="until=XXh"
where XX is on the order of a few days.
I have one of my domains on Cloudflare and was thinking of moving the rest of them there. What makes it harder to move name servers away from Cloudflare than other places?
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- This is not medical advice
- Ask your doctor
- Talk to the airline. They can at least tell you if they carry peanuts on their flights. And you should inform them if you go, to make sure the crew knows
- On overnight flights they often serve one or two full meals. I don't recall being served peanuts on one, but it's possible some of their meal options include nuts
W3m and elinks come to mind for text only.
That's a great tip! It turns out I must have already tried some of that. I found multiple settings in about:config. Anything with a file picker works (open, save as), but the "open folder" from the Downloads dialog must just not use xdg-open, since none of the settings had an effect on that. It's not the end of the world, but it would be nice to have my Dolphin bookmarks and places.
Edit: Adding this here in case someone in the future finds this searching for the problem. It looks like I'm bitten by the bug described in comment 55 (near the bottom) of this Firefox bug report. TL;DR: it works if I have Dolphin open already, but if not, it starts Nautilus. While this isn't great, at least I have a workaround.