some right-wingers are not comfortable with lemmy funder being openly communists
You don’t have to be a right winger to be uncomfortable with tankies
Devops Engineer | Linux & FOSS Enthusiast | Gaming, Homelab, 3D Printing
some right-wingers are not comfortable with lemmy funder being openly communists
You don’t have to be a right winger to be uncomfortable with tankies
Uptime Kuma is in no way comparable to what Datadog offers. The best FOSS alternative would be the whole Prometheus/Granada/Thanos/Loki/etc stack, and that would require at least a whole volunteer just to set up and administer.
There’s nothing wrong with DD, they’re a staple in the cloud industry and are absolutely trustworthy.
Pedialyte popsicles are also the best hangover cure when you can’t even hold down water
You misunderstood. I’m not talking about scaling the DB horizontally, I’m talking about scaling the application using the DB horizontally.
Please teach me how to configure my containers so SQLite can scale horizontally.
If you don’t care about persistence, why are you even using a DB in the first place?
I’m a devops engineer, so I understand Linux well. I actually used exclusively Linux all throughout university.
Linux works just as good as windows for 98% of my uses cases. And for the 2% that it doesnt, I can probably figure out how to get it to work or an alternative.
But honestly, I usually just don’t want to anymore. After working 8 hours, I’m very seldom in the mood to do more debugging, so I switch to Windows more and more frequently.
If this is my experience as someone who understands it, most normies will just fuck off the moment the first program they want to run doesn’t.
In a world of containers and stateless applications, fuck SQLite.
Go and Python :D
PHP and NodeJS D:
A comment on my other account got brigaded by tankies a while ago. Was told to “fuck off, liberal”
But then that guy got banned from the instance, and everything was good.
It’s the wrong use of a meme template
It’s a low effort meme in a general linux community
Ubuntu ~2005/2006. I was introduced to Linux by my friend’s older brother in highschool, then proceeded to nuke the windows install on my parents’ PC.
That’s when they decided to buy me a laptop, which I dualbooted ubuntu on. Now almost two decades later, I’m a devops engineer working professionally with Linux
I run vanilla Kubernetes on 4 worker nodes and 3 control planes for high availability.
Unless you’re some freak who enjoys K8S so much you don’t want to ever get away from it, I don’t recommend it
You’re the only one interpreting it like that.
Some trauma stays with you for life. No one’s calling her a “used up rag,” the reality is that she may continue to suffer from what happened for the rest of her life.