What Are You Doing Right Now
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Caught a ride to the "office" today. Way faster than walking.
Serving tray down the stairs?
the kids would love to have a go -
@nadnerB said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Caught a ride to the "office" today. Way faster than walking.
Serving tray down the stairs?
That would be pretty scary to do, we are living in a Soviet era block apartment.
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Now context is lost. Nick k modded my last comment
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@Texkonc said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Now context is lost. Nick k modded my last comment
Oh, what was the context before?
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Why do companies pay so much for IT staff, but refuse to pay anything to have running systems or backups?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1983538-walking-into-a-nightmare
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Not kidding.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Why do companies pay so much for IT staff, but refuse to pay anything to have running systems or backups?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1983538-walking-into-a-nightmare
Snapshots are not backups. They're "moment in time" captures of the server that allows rollback in case a patch or an upgrade goes wrong. If the vm dies due to disk corruption or a host failure, and your "backups" are nothing more than snapshots, you're out of luck. More, keeping snapshots around longer than necessary burns disk space and will slow performance over time. The longer the snapshot history, the more disk space you'll use and the worse performance will get.
I love statements like this that completely ignore the fact that there is more than one type of snapshot. COW is different from AOW/ROW. Snapshots can be backups if you export them. And this seems to ignore the fact you can do file level restores from snapshots.
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@stacksofplates said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Why do companies pay so much for IT staff, but refuse to pay anything to have running systems or backups?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1983538-walking-into-a-nightmare
Snapshots are not backups. They're "moment in time" captures of the server that allows rollback in case a patch or an upgrade goes wrong. If the vm dies due to disk corruption or a host failure, and your "backups" are nothing more than snapshots, you're out of luck. More, keeping snapshots around longer than necessary burns disk space and will slow performance over time. The longer the snapshot history, the more disk space you'll use and the worse performance will get.
I love statements like this that completely ignore the fact that there is more than one type of snapshot. COW is different from AOW/ROW. Snapshots can be backups if you export them. And this seems to ignore the fact you can do file level restores from snapshots.
If you're exporting snapshots then they become backups. I don't see the issue with the statement. That's generally how VM level backups work they take a snapshot of the VM and export it to a different storage device.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Why do companies pay so much for IT staff, but refuse to pay anything to have running systems or backups?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1983538-walking-into-a-nightmare
Step1: Look for a new gig.
Step2: Look for a new gig. -
@stacksofplates said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Why do companies pay so much for IT staff, but refuse to pay anything to have running systems or backups?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1983538-walking-into-a-nightmare
Snapshots are not backups. They're "moment in time" captures of the server that allows rollback in case a patch or an upgrade goes wrong. If the vm dies due to disk corruption or a host failure, and your "backups" are nothing more than snapshots, you're out of luck. More, keeping snapshots around longer than necessary burns disk space and will slow performance over time. The longer the snapshot history, the more disk space you'll use and the worse performance will get.
I love statements like this that completely ignore the fact that there is more than one type of snapshot. COW is different from AOW/ROW. Snapshots can be backups if you export them. And this seems to ignore the fact you can do file level restores from snapshots.
But, it is important to recognize, that it is the action of exporting and decoupling that makes it a backup, that it started life as a snapshot isn't a factor. Snapshots aren't backups is a true statements. Just like copies are not backups. But you can copy something in the process of making a backup.
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Facepalming at Windows 10 Enterprises new default Settings applet for what you want to do with the XBox controller you'll definately be connected to it...
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@aidan_walsh said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Facepalming at Windows 10 Enterprises new default Settings applet for what you want to do with the XBox controller you'll definately be connected to it...
Strong insight into how Microsoft perceives their audience.
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What year is this?
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Wondering how to allow a Raspberry Pi running Ubuntu Mate onto the corporate Wifi that uses a Windows Radius Server.
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@scottalanmiller At least it hasn't reinstalled Candy Crush so far
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Going through all of the guides I've done on ML and checking the man pages for the commands to understand every aspect of the guides completely. Also reading @scottalanmiller's Linux System Administration Guide.
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@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Going through all of the guides I've done on ML and checking the man pages for the commands to understand every aspect of the guides completely. Also reading @scottalanmiller's Linux System Administration Guide.
Hopefully I have time soon to get a few more articles out on that.
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@aidan_walsh said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller At least it hasn't reinstalled Candy Crush so far
So far....
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@wirestyle22 said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Going through all of the guides I've done on ML and checking the man pages for the commands to understand every aspect of the guides completely. Also reading @scottalanmiller's Linux System Administration Guide.
Hopefully I have time soon to get a few more articles out on that.
I'm catching up soon but sometimes I re-read it to verify I'm seeing everything accurately.
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Playing around in KDE. KWrite has a vim mode which is pretty awesome. It's a pretty freaking good built in editor.