Pretty sure I saw an article last week when it rolled out that it’s USA only. Haven’t seen it in Australia yet either.
Pretty sure I saw an article last week when it rolled out that it’s USA only. Haven’t seen it in Australia yet either.
Bloody hell mate. A little bit of warning before so casually dropping Java Spring out there.
Or probably pay an extra $5 for the better hosting plan.
Yes unfortunately some were hit too many times with the stupid stick as a form of child rearing. The rest of us learnt to code BASIC to pass the time as latchkey kids.
Easy Gen X pass. I actually think Gen X would be able to pass all generational captchas. We’re the first “microchip” generation and have generally kept up and lived through most of the tech fads and changes.
If the UK doesn’t want it, offer it to Australia. We’re already in Eurovision!
What a boson!
Thanks for the link. Seems timely to read about after Sabine’s recent video as well. Academia is broken.
Where my turbo vision peeps at?
Surely this will just devolve into “no reviews ever”.
Oh I can see your problem: everyone is still waiting for JIRA to load.
It was so much fun. I still get some of the same thrills building a retro console using a rpi, or a home media server in the garage using a second hand dual Xeon motherboard.
But sadly as the CEO of a software firm I don’t get to hack away much on anything anymore.
I do occasionally get to impress the young ones with my Linux command line wizardry and 1337 vim skills. I really need to get a beard.
At university in the 90s some friends and I ran our own Linux server. It was a 486 or early Pentium and we hooked it up to the university network in a post grad student’s office who was happy to just keep it running under his desk.
We even got the campus sysadmins to give us a proper edu domain name. It was a more open and different time and ethernet still meant coax cables with T connectors and terminators.
We were running pre v1 kernel on slackware and it was all installed from floppies. We used it as a web server, coded and played muds, read newsgroups and mail etc. I think tin and pine etc. we easily had 20 users using it from the computer labs.
Anyways the computer kept dying or freezing occasionally. Still early Linux. And the office where it was kept wasn’t always open and we didn’t have a key.
Being electronic engineering students we built a whole circuit with a PIC controller which plugged into the parallel port. We wrote a watchdog daemon which would keep pinging this dongle. And the firmware on the PIC would check for these pings.
If the server died the pings would stop and the dead man’s switch dongle was wired directly into the hardware reset button of the PC.
Worked like a charm for 4 years. And apparently worked for another 5 or 6 after I left.
They probably got frustrated and kicked it across the room and it landed upside and started loading.
That’s my head canon anyways.
Not great but not terrible. At least there were no ads.
Things are changing. It just takes time. We’re pretty much at peak carbon by all indications.
Change is happening. We’re reaching peak carbon this year or the next 2 years. China is widely forecast to emit less Carbon next year than this year.
We just need to keep chipping away. This problem was created over 100+ years and it takes time to turn the ship.
Invoice.doc