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Cake day: June 23rd, 2023

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  • ikidd@lemmy.worldtoLinux@programming.devLTT does another Linux Challenge
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    10 hours ago

    He does it this way in order to make Linux look bad. It’s happened so many times this way, I don’t know why people don’t see it. He either approaches it like a complete noob and deliberately makes mistakes that anyone that’s used a computer for as long as he has wouldn’t think of making, or he has some “disaster” that he blames on Linux.

    Then he does his “more in sorrow than anger” schpiel where he pats the Linux devs on the head and thanks them for trying but too bad they failed miserably, he was really hoping they’d do better this time. Oh, well, back to Windows I guess. Just wait for the cheque from Satya to show up in the post.

    Downvote away, you LTT bumboys. At this point, between the way he runs his business and his examples of blatant theivery, if you’re still a fan of this chucklefuck, I don’t know if you’re worth saving.







  • You can do a sanoid sync to another zpool or dataset on the same machine or a remote host, they behave the same. It’s replicating that dataset on the other machine, then sending the snapshots after that point over via zfs send. You can instruct sanoid to prune those snapshots after the send and start new ones for the next send, or just accumulate them so you have points in time to revert to.

    IIRC, you can send a zfs snapshot to a file, but I can’t recall how to do that, so AFAIK, you can’t just send it to a file based service like Onedrive. You can use a service like zfs.rent and send them a harddrive with your base sync on it (encrypt it) and then once they’ve brought it online, you can sync to that. Best to test out your methods with the drive hooked up locally.

    I know it’s anathema to Lemmy, but the best help you’ll get is Claude where you can paste the errors in and have it sort it out for you as you troubleshoot. It’s pretty good at shit like that.





  • I find some of the workflows in it a bit strange, like not having an Add button on the list of host proxies, it’s a separate menu item on the left which weird. And the way you request a SSL cert by hitting OK and then you get a popup asking if you want a cert, and you’d better have already set your options for how you want the cert, but if you create a host without a cert you have to go through all the options again and check them because it doesn’t keep track of your preference.

    IDK, in any case it fixed a bunch of problems I was having with NPM so it has that going for it, which is nice.