@Dashrender said:
That's interesting - but how many people actually want that?
I do. It's just a single picture, not really that big of a deal....
@Dashrender said:
That's interesting - but how many people actually want that?
I do. It's just a single picture, not really that big of a deal....
@Dashrender said:
What she hates is that people aren't doing their work. She believe that if Facebook didn't exist that the employees would have little else to do and would therefore do their work. Of course this is the fallacy.
This is why it's so important to hire people that love there jobs
Both projects are open source, and allow you to run on your own server if you want to
@BBigford You have to wait. If you look at there GitHub, it's listed under "Issues"
Special offer: -30% until 28th April 2016 with the promo code* VPS30GO only applies to 6 to 12 month plans.
Figures I would see that after renewing
Status for the jail: sshd
|- Filter
| |- Currently failed: 0
| |- Total failed: 216
| `- File list: /var/log/secure
`- Actions
|- Currently banned: 1
|- Total banned: 1
`- Banned IP list: 183.3.202.170
Canonical will today (April 21st) launch version 16.04 of its Ubuntu Linux distribution, Xenial Xerus, the new long-term-support version of the project.
As the name suggests, long-term support versions of Ubuntu get, er, long-term support, a guaranteed five years from today to be precise.
The Xenial Xerus will therefore be fed, watered and de-loused for years to come, making them a fine platform for serious endeavours.
Canonical thinks the Xerus are ideal for cloudy, containerised computing. ZFS is pitched as one of several features that make the distribution ideal for such roles.
The LXD hypervisor is central to Canonical's containerisation ambitions, as it offers greater speed and density for guests and therefore makes its containers-inside-lightweight-VMs play possible. The inclusion of Ceph adds scale for storage, which helps Ubuntu to take on weightier tasks, with or without OpenStack.
So far, so good. Yet no less an entity than GNU daddy Richard Stallman thinks Canonical is violating the GNU GPL because you can't blend GPL code and non-GPL code. The Software Freedom Conservancy agrees and has form for funding court actions that test the GPL, as the case involving VMwareindicates.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/04/21/ubuntu_16_04_lts_launched/
So to be clear, you not really encrypting the drive itself, your encrypting the data your putting on the drive.
It's very cheap... I would.
If I was hosting email on-site I mean
On second thought, then you lose the versioning on each PC. No thanks!
@coliver said in RAID Caching and SSD Drives:
Is the SSD array faster then the built in cache?
That is the question