I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream.
If anyone wants a hint.
It is amazing.
Used to be an LVM group using the LVM docker volume driver. So every container volume became its own LV.
Now just a bunch of devices behind a btrfs volume mounted on /var/lib/docker
or wherever.
In the past I’ve tended towards /srv/*
as most mounts end up being application specific storage.
Though now it is all mounted as container volume storage.
Yeah, saw that and had a micro-rage.
That kind of bullshit is what makes me vindictively reduce my retail spending.
… hoops (often called “wickets” in the United States) …
Of course.
It’s like they expect the orange to endlessly give juice when squeezed.
Those aren’t wickets, at least not cricket wickets. Unless the hoops used in croquet are also called wickets.
Though depicting a factory that produces an otherwise ordinary wooden pole would be a little more challenging to be unambiguous.
Eeeh, if anything, systemd is Microsoft’s contribution.
/s sort of
I get gerrymandered, I kill Jack.
Of course the party that’s “good for business” would be sucked in by that latest CxO craze of “AI everything”.
They can’t but help fall over themselves chasing a technology that promises fewer employees.
… For sufficiently large values of 1.
You put the em-PHA-sis n the wrong syl-A-byl.
Good points.
Aluminium is notable as one of the few materials that is cheaper to recycle than mine and refine.
Well. To Java that’s just a string of utf-8 characters, assuming you haven’t bastardised the encoding, and it’s just yanked out of an HTTP entity. So of course they’re different.
If you’re using some json parser and object mapping library (like Jackson) then all bets are off 'cause it could be configured any which way.
On every other language and library it’s whatever the defined behaviour is.
3/10
The thing that rubs me the wrong way is that it’s not that #3 or whatever isn’t recyclable, it’s that it’s not commercially viable to recycle it, as if burying it is somehow of more commercially viable.
It literally comes down to some penny pinching now at the expense of a few generations down the line having to deal with land fills.
It’s only commercially viable to bury most of our waste because we exclude the environmental and intergenerational costs of doing so.
Part of their job is to respond to OIA requests.
That those requests might take effort is irrelevant, or at least considered by higher-ups before directing staff to assemble the OIA material.
The PhD had among the strongest reasons for her principal requests: research. That she felt that something was slightly off is relevant: if her requests have been responded to without proper care then her research is flawed.
She likey was looking for evidence that some of her requests were not properly responded to… instead she found a personal attack.
“No, this is Patrick”
That’s amazing. Who needs geothermal hot water when you have a DC?
Poor data visualisation is a pet peeve of mine and I’m disproportionately vigorous when talking about it ;-)
Especially after a few drinks with dinner.
Oh, the anti memetics division! My favourite.
It’s my first day.