What Are You Doing Right Now
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Any K8S experts in the community? Asking for a friend.
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Reading about nginx directives during the last part of my lunch break.
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reading/watching videos on Take out/delivery software.
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@nadnerB said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
When the original, not-funny show was redone for American TV is when I first heard about it, and in both cases it was so obnoxious a premise to me that someone slapping a child would somehow throw entire families through loops and just a nuclear bomb-style fall out of whining, my first thought when I saw the Australian one was "I know a lot of Aussies and they aren't huge pussies like this, who is this supposed to appeal to?" I could only imagine in real life in Australia or America (well maybe not some of WASP America) the guy hitting the kid simply getting his teeth kicked in, not a super-PTSD melodrama rippling through the entire community.
In the words of Bart Simpson:
Sock him, Dad! Sock everybody!
Plus they make the kid so annoying and deserving that it's almost a comedy.
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Exchange 2016 needs to mature
https://oddytee.wordpress.com/2016/08/16/outlook-client-does-not-connect-to-mailbox-on-exchange-2016/
This is still happening 3 years later! with the latest CU -
@dbeato said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Exchange 2016 needs to mature
https://oddytee.wordpress.com/2016/08/16/outlook-client-does-not-connect-to-mailbox-on-exchange-2016/
This is still happening 3 years later! with the latest CUSeems like a fruitless thing to wish for after all of this time.
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Getting Ready to leave for the day.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dbeato said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Exchange 2016 needs to mature
https://oddytee.wordpress.com/2016/08/16/outlook-client-does-not-connect-to-mailbox-on-exchange-2016/
This is still happening 3 years later! with the latest CUSeems like a fruitless thing to wish for after all of this time.
Well, it should mature because if Exchange 2019 has this issue, is lame.
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@dbeato said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dbeato said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Exchange 2016 needs to mature
https://oddytee.wordpress.com/2016/08/16/outlook-client-does-not-connect-to-mailbox-on-exchange-2016/
This is still happening 3 years later! with the latest CUSeems like a fruitless thing to wish for after all of this time.
Well, it should mature because if Exchange 2019 has this issue, is lame.
By the time 2019 is EoL'd it'll get fixed.
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New ML ads just went up, on the footer.
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Boy this day flew by, it was exhausting. I can't believe how late it is already.
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Wondering if I hate WordPress or I hate web developers with no idea. Maybe neither, maybe both, I don't know
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@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Wondering if I hate WordPress or I hate web developers with no idea. Maybe neither, maybe both, I don't know
More the web developers with no idea. Of course that implies both.
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@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Wondering if I hate WordPress or I hate web developers with no idea. Maybe neither, maybe both, I don't know
Is it WP that you do not like, or plugins or themes or some other additional component?
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@StrongBad
Incomplete list in no special orderWordpress:
- If you update WordPress you risk breaking the site.
- If you don't, you risk being hacked.
- It is too big that the ecosystem is out of control.
Web developers with no idea:
4. They demand cPanel access. And the clients authorize that access (out of my pay grade)
5. The mess with DNS, really, why?
6. They choose poor pluginsAbout points 1 &2: Theory says WordPress is secure but plugins maybe not. So the problem is not WordPress and the solution is to choose good plugins. WordPress is so easy to use that point 3 is on spot. And then I fall on point 6 because everybody can be a WordPress developer/web master. Talk about Catch 22
Right now, I have a production web site down because the web developer insists on using a plugin that breaks the site. I already disabled the plugin twice.
Perhaps I am in the wrong industry, it is just that fell in love IT at first sight
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@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@StrongBad
Incomplete list in no special orderWordpress:
- If you update WordPress you risk breaking the site.
- If you don't, you risk being hacked.
- It is too big that the ecosystem is out of control.
Web developers with no idea:
4. They demand cPanel access. And the clients authorize that access (out of my pay grade)
5. The mess with DNS, really, why?
6. They choose poor pluginsAbout points 1 &2: Theory says WordPress is secure but plugins maybe not. So the problem is not WordPress and the solution is to choose good plugins. WordPress is so easy to use that point 3 is on spot. And then I fall on point 6 because everybody can be a WordPress developer/web master. Talk about Catch 22
Right now, I have a production web site down because the web developer insists on using a plugin that breaks the site. I already disabled the plugin twice.
Perhaps I am in the wrong industry, it is just that fell in love IT at first sight
I have never broken WP with updates.
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@JaredBusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@StrongBad
Incomplete list in no special orderWordpress:
- If you update WordPress you risk breaking the site.
- If you don't, you risk being hacked.
- It is too big that the ecosystem is out of control.
Web developers with no idea:
4. They demand cPanel access. And the clients authorize that access (out of my pay grade)
5. The mess with DNS, really, why?
6. They choose poor pluginsAbout points 1 &2: Theory says WordPress is secure but plugins maybe not. So the problem is not WordPress and the solution is to choose good plugins. WordPress is so easy to use that point 3 is on spot. And then I fall on point 6 because everybody can be a WordPress developer/web master. Talk about Catch 22
Right now, I have a production web site down because the web developer insists on using a plugin that breaks the site. I already disabled the plugin twice.
Perhaps I am in the wrong industry, it is just that fell in love IT at first sight
I have never broken WP with updates.
Same here, they seem to be really good. Way, way better than, say, Windows. They "just work". I've been using WordPress for a really long time and support a lot of sites.
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@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
Wondering if I hate WordPress or I hate web developers with no idea. Maybe neither, maybe both, I don't know
Web developers tend to know how to do things, web designers tend to be utterly incompetent with programming and write terrible code regardless of how pretty their sites are, they also choose to use WordPress which is worthy of any hate you throw at it. There's also dumb web developers, but most of them just work for major corporations.
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@scottalanmiller said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@JaredBusch said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
@StrongBad
Incomplete list in no special orderWordpress:
- If you update WordPress you risk breaking the site.
- If you don't, you risk being hacked.
- It is too big that the ecosystem is out of control.
Web developers with no idea:
4. They demand cPanel access. And the clients authorize that access (out of my pay grade)
5. The mess with DNS, really, why?
6. They choose poor pluginsAbout points 1 &2: Theory says WordPress is secure but plugins maybe not. So the problem is not WordPress and the solution is to choose good plugins. WordPress is so easy to use that point 3 is on spot. And then I fall on point 6 because everybody can be a WordPress developer/web master. Talk about Catch 22
Right now, I have a production web site down because the web developer insists on using a plugin that breaks the site. I already disabled the plugin twice.
Perhaps I am in the wrong industry, it is just that fell in love IT at first sight
I have never broken WP with updates.
Same here, they seem to be really good. Way, way better than, say, Windows. They "just work". I've been using WordPress for a really long time and support a lot of sites.
I hate WordPress but I've always praised both their reverse compatibility and their slow crawl toward proper design showing they at least, I think, have some understanding of how bad it is.
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@dave_c said in What Are You Doing Right Now:
- They demand cPanel access. And the clients authorize that access (out of my pay grade)
This happens from time to time when some project I worked on is handed over to some new guy, they often are baffled by the concept of "I use SSH, I don't install anything on the server not needed, it's just Apache, PHP, and MySQL, and SSH" or whatever.