Have a look at last epoch, good game and interesting itemization.
Have a look at last epoch, good game and interesting itemization.
They only mentioned opioids, so there are a ton of other options which can add special effects to your daily life ;)
On Reddit it felt useless to comment, when I found an interesting topic the discussion was already drowning with one word comments and other useless stuff. Here on Lemmy the discussions feel more genuine. Probably it’s because the userbase is more mature, or the nature of Lemmy is not to generate money.
Yeah my browsing time has gone down compared to Reddit. But Lemmy has far less mindless content, if I’m on here I’m more engaged and actively read articles linked or write comments.
Yeah, it’s fun to play and has a deep loadout system. And most important no microtransactions as far as I’ve seen.
Never meant to defend oracle. I dislike them even more than IBM.
Here is the source blog post from oracle: https://www.oracle.com/news/announcement/blog/keep-linux-open-and-free-2023-07-10/
RedHat really fucked up with this move. I know RedHat employees and everyone from RedHat I met so far was proud they work there and how much open source meant to the company. I guess there will be more and more redhatters looking for new opportunities in the coming months.
I would say if you feel sick call in.
Personally I called in even with a headache or when I wasn’t in the right headspace to work properly. Take care of yourself first.
Depending on how your company handles things of course.
No, they won’t loose all content. I think the quality will just get worse and worse depending on what you view as quality. For the average social media user it probably will be good enough, or it will develop into reposts from other mainstream platforms.
Mass exodus maybe in terms of power users. The average Reddit user used the official client before the api restrictions. My guess is that many people who posted good stuff ditched Reddit.
Docker inspect $container should return you most of the info for the container. You can also get a shell inside the container via docker exec -it $container sh. If you have a dockerfile for the container you can see how the container has been set up.
Additionally the shell history can also yield useful information on what has been done. Docker saves the logs of running containers in /var/lib/docker/containers
You can run containers as systemd services with the help of podman: https://www.putorius.net/how-to-start-podman-containers-on-boot.html
Where the containers built by someone in your company or provided by the software vendor?
Don’t forget about the time wasted on social media or other useless stuff on the internet.
LFCS should be on par with RHCSA. CKA is also a good certificate which should get you a good return.
From my point the RHCSA is still a valid exam despite RedHats recent moves. HR Drones and Managers won’t care what RedHat is doing as long as they are supporting their products.
Then message the server admins or you create a PR on the lemmy github page with the missing information. The missing legal footnotes is an issue you have to take up with them or the upstream lemmy repo on github.
I’m also no expert, just trying to learn more about the topic as it’s kind of interesting to see how other people are interpreting it.
Receive users’ consent before you use any cookies except strictly necessary cookies.
Wouldn’t the auth cookie fall into the strictly necessary category?
There is only one cookie present when I inspect the Cookies with my browsers dev tools. Which seems to be the auth token for my account.
The modlog seems also good on mobile browsers.