Crossed the 40-minute hold mark for Comcast's Customer Security team.
Posts made by EddieJennings
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
About to deal with someone trying to impersonate our CEO in order to phish information.
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RE: What Are You Watching Now
Watching the best of David Alan Grier from In Living Color on Youtube.
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Just sent some E-mails to Xbyte, ServerMonkey, and Stallard to get quotes on potential Dell R710 addition to my lab.
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RE: Weekend Plans
@Danp xByte on Scott's suggestion, Ebay, and looking to see who else is involved with selling old servers.
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RE: Weekend Plans
Price shop for a Dell r710 server f0 r3@lz! Too many tasks appeared to do this last weekend.
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Completing my duties as network / server administrator: Creating a form-fillable PDF.
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RE: Comparing GREP to BASH REGEX
For this particular question, you're asking me to divide by zero, for I haven't seen a response.
The explanation of the fact that REGEX doesn't represent a universal syntax is lacking in the Linux Essentials course. Since, that ? mark was used (with the definition I stated earlier) with
ls
examples, and the beginning of the REGEX module says "you've used this before but didn't know it was REGEX." The module itself uses both grep and BASH (ls
), but no mention of the fact there are differences, which can lead to confusion. -
RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
@scottalanmiller Celebration of learning! That makes perfect sense. Until now, I thought that REGEX is REGEX is REGEX.
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RE: Comparing GREP to BASH REGEX
@scottalanmiller I'm doing this the wrong, but before I find some kind of documentation, I'm experimenting
I wonder if it's something specific about grep, since the following seems to be true.
ls
file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt
ls file?.txt
file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt
ls file..txt
no result. -
Comparing GREP to BASH REGEX
@scottalanmiller I might do that. Let's say I have a file that has the following line of text
aabbcc
in a file calledabc.txt
. (Using part of their example)If I do
grep .cc abc.txt
a result is returned, since I've learned that the dot stands for one character. However, if I dogrep ?cc abc.txt
no results are returned. I thought the ? stands for zero or one character. If that's true, why would it not return a result? -
RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Seeing how well their community responds. I asked a question about grep and regular expressions.
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Listening to Naruto themes while I work on tickets.
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RE: What Are You Doing Right Now
Trying to stay focused on my tasks -- too excited about home lab possibilities.
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RE: SMB / Enterprise Hardware for Linux Environment
@scottalanmiller said in SMB / Enterprise Hardware for Linux Environment:
However, something very important.... you would expect to only run Linux (with very rare exception) as a VM, not on the bare metal. In that way, same as Windows, however....
Unlike Windows, two major hypervisors leverage Linux. KVM and Xen. So when using those you need Linux to be on the bare metal AND in a VM.
That's what I figured as far as almost all instances of Linux being VMs (as our one CentOS server is a Hyper-V VM). Although I have a beefy desktop at home, on which I can run several Hyper-V VMs, my goal is to try to get my hands on some of the hardware that would be potentially used in a business, in order to do some of the projects mentioned in those articles.