I went from Debian to Arch to Alpine to Fedora, Fedora 38 was very much plug and play as far as drivers for the used laptops I buy. Been rock solid ever since.
Distro hop and try it out, a live image is only a dd command away.
I went from Debian to Arch to Alpine to Fedora, Fedora 38 was very much plug and play as far as drivers for the used laptops I buy. Been rock solid ever since.
Distro hop and try it out, a live image is only a dd command away.
Agreed, this is the future Nikola Tesla wanted, and it’s not some wild eyed crack pottery but what he was actually working on in Colorado.
How do you like Artix?
Are you me? All that plus kubernetes clusters on a dell t430 running proxmox behind an opnsense appliance.
Why not a more stable and proven distro like Fedora workstation? I game on steam on an old P1 running Fedora 40 if that’s of any worth.
You’re in custody, your friends don’t know you’re locked up. Who’s the idiot?
Likely as not, person charged with crime is in custody. Police force person to unlock phone, then police install malware and wait for comms to come in.
Yeah, shows that the internal client is researching security topics
Sounds like the kind of oversight that tends to come with a union and the representation therein.
I would hate to work where you developed the idea a protected main/prod branch is something novel.
That depends on what you run it on.
Yeah, mostly due to folk in power, drawing lines on a map they do not understand
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Israeli–Palestinian_conflict
How could one Dev commit to prod without other Devs reviewing the MR? IF you’re not protecting your prod branch that’s a cultural issue. I don’t know where you’ve worked in the past, or where you’re working now, but once it’s N+1 engineers in a code base there needs to be code reviews.
Hey man, look, our scrums are supposed to be confidential. Why are you putting me on blast here in public like this?
That’s not how any of this worked. Also not how working in a large team that develops for thousands of clients works. It wasn’t just one dev that fucked up here.
Crowd Strike Falcon uses a signed boot driver. They don’t want to wait for MS to get around to signing a driver if there’s a zero day they’re trying to patch. So they have an empty driver with null pointers to the meat of a real boot driver. If you fat finger a reg key, that file only containing the 9C character, points to another null pointer in a different file and you end up getting a non bootable system as the whole driver is now empty.
If you don’t understand what I just said here’s some folk that spent good time and effort to explain it.
Git Blame exists for a reason, and that’s to find the engineer who pushed the bad commit so everyone can work together to fix it.
Blame the Project manager/Middle manager/C-Level exec/Unaware CEO/Greedy Shareholders who allowed for a CI/CD process that doesn’t allow ample time to test and validate changes.
Software needs a union. This shit is getting out of control.
The broken clock fallacy rings true
I just use SaltStack for that