

Yeah what is up with that? It’s nice to know where things are but whatever happened to /usr/local
Yeah what is up with that? It’s nice to know where things are but whatever happened to /usr/local
It’s got some real scientifically based dragons vibes.
It was originally a BIOS interrupt, but eventually got captured by the OS. Here’s Dave Bradley talking about inventing it https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=K_lg7w8gAXQ
We are just carrying on the tradition of das blinkenlights
Comprehended under sysadmin because the attitude is the same just the devices are a bit different.
A phone number is not strictly required. They use it for some verifications, like suspicious activity. You can switch the number to whichever account needs it at the time, but only one login can have that phone number.
Violating the transitive property? Go home JavaScript, you’re drunk.
The Patsy from Monty Python in the PHP section got me
Just because there are a lot of rules doesn’t make something chaotic in this system. The lawful-chaotic axis is a spectrum of how much of a stickler for the rules you are. YAML’s “one whitespace out of place and your whole config is fucked” attitude puts it squarely into lawful territory. JSON by contrast gives no shits about your file structure as long as your curly braces match.
I honestly think that JSON and YAML should be swapped due to YAML’s strict indentation rules whereas you can just pack an entire JSON object on one line.
Learned the hard way that anything copied from a MS product gets pasted to a plain text editor first. I especially love how SharePoint sprinkles “zero with space” characters liberally throughout.
In the US, appliance bulbs are exempt from the new law. Which by the way mandates a lumens per watt threshold, it doesn’t explicitly ban incandescent bulbs. If someone could come up with an incandescent that meets the requirement they are free to sell as many as they can make.
run0 for you my guy