Time travel? It never stopped. Agriculture was always rife with legal child labor. Now it's just seeping into other industries.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_labor_in_the_United_States#21st_century
Time travel? It never stopped. Agriculture was always rife with legal child labor. Now it's just seeping into other industries.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_labor_in_the_United_States#21st_century
What does "old network" and "new network" mean? What are they, LAN setup? Docker setup? Describe them better (netmasks, routing etc.)
Right, right, you just have to reinvent a dozen wheels, use only software that Kubernetes knows how to work with, and learn a bunch of new names for everything.
I do all that with docker... I fail to see what Kubernetes adds to that on a single machine.
You can also activate Windows very easily. Search for "github massgravel". It's one command you need to run in Powershell as administrator.
She had a swimming ring.
https://geek-cookbook.funkypenguin.co.nz/recipes/keycloak/authenticate-against-openldap/
It builds on the Keycloak and OpenLDAP tutorials but they're all very well covered.
I use Flym on Android. Sadly abandoned but still working great. It can import and export OPML, has an RSS search built-in and can retrieve the full version of a piece from the original website.
Write a document that describes the main points of your setup. That's about it. You don't have to teach them everything, just guide them. Like, if you use a certain Linux distro and Docker just say "I use Docker on Debian and the compose files are in that directory". That should be enough to get someone started if they know Linux and Docker, and if they don't they're not going to learn it from your doc, they should go looking for someone who does.
Let's face it, many of our self-hosted setups are DIY setups we make as a hobby. If you really want an out-of-the-box experience that can be administered by a non-techy there will be limits to what you can achieve.
That's besides the point, they can probably use any number of alternatives. The problem is the act itself, being suddenly booted off a platform is very disruptive and it takes time to regroup. Also, who's to say that Meta won't do that to them as well.
There's no reason to, there's nothing wrong with Nvidia. I game on it without any issues. Most people on Linux use Nvidia.
Again, like OP said, those are typically distinct functionality: issue tracking, source control, deployment etc. GitHub bringing everything into one platform is atypical and obviously done for the goal of centralization. The more stuff you add to a platform the harder it makes it to leave or replicate.
But no, technically speaking you don't need to have all of it in one place. There's no reason for which you must manage everything together.
I don't even understand why people like GitHub so much, its source management sucks. The fact it still doesn't have a decent history visualization to this day is mind-boggling.
Look for ways to do things separately and you will find much better tools. GitHub's "one size fits all" approach is terrible and only holds because people are too lazy to look for any alternative.