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differentview97

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differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
That's entirely up to the company operating that ICE or TGV train. Not saying it's going to happen - many companies don't let other's wagons on their trains. But many do.

BTW so far my friend's train was never delayed by his own fault, not sure what problem you're talking about - there's no problem, his train had usually the lowest priority (it costs money to have higher priority) so he's the one waiting for "normal" trains.

When I said there are delays, I meant the "normal" trains primarily. But sure, as he increases operation it's going to happen to him too.

Improve schedule planning and Amtrak won't have problems too.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Sure I can. On the same track you have many different companies operating their own lines, combined multi-operatoe lines, as well as irregular connections (again single and multiple operators combined).

I've seen multiple operators (some of them entirely private, some entirely state-owned corporations, some combinations) combine their trains on an EuroCity-labelled line more than a few times.

I have a friend who is working on founding his own train company and he's actually providing services to the state-owned corporations where they have him operate their wagons in his combined train, with his own locomotive. He operated a major intercity line several times this way (they use his service when there's a problem on the regular route) - and it stopped to recombine several times. I've personally been on a train ride that combined his private for-fun party wagon with an EC train.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Samba - or to be precise MS AD is not just about files. On Linux it's limited to files and that's exactly the problem I'm talking about. On Mac it's at least able to share certificates and some basic settings now - still not ideal though.

Actually with modern clouds like OneDrive it's not about files at all, I haven't seen network drives being used for a decade. It's about privileges to various resources available within the corporate network and about what you can't do with your work computer, and about having the computer auto-configure to play with all the resources on corporate network.

It's about setting detailed access level based on AD groups - including user applications, not just networked drives or whatever. Permissions to CRM/ERP systems, document management systems etc. Detailed as much as "this user can only see contracts and invoices assigned to the London branch".

I open my computer and I immediately see the printer that's nearest to me as the first printer in the list. Access to it is authenticated and authorized (with no additional password prompts). I can simply choose a document from SharePoint and send it right there, walk over there and slap my chip card on it and have it printed. It's part of my system's print queue but if I switch computers in the meantime I can still work with the queue item there.

I scan a document and it goes directly to my OneDrive which is automatically connected to whatever computer I sit at as soon as I log in, regardless of me using a random terminal that's been sitting in whatever office I'm visiting.

I'm unable to break anything because there is no root to login to, nobody ever uses sudo on the computer, nobody ever needs admin privileges on it (harder to do with devs but common for all other professions). If an app needs to be added the computer is remotely reimaged from an image with the app added (this requires a one-setting change by the admin, nothing else). No user settings or files go missing in the process.

Corporate VPN, firewall, proxy servers, wifi network, wired network - all of it requires auth. The system just takes my user certificate and just works with it all by itself. Nothing is available without auth, nothing is unencrypted.

Building this kind of system with Microsoft products is as easy as installing a few apps on the corporate server machine. I literally learned how to do it when I was 12 and couldn't speak English yet.

Building it with Linux - well I am pretty skilled with Linux admin (as much as you'd expect someone who used it as their primary system for 15 years and hosts their own websites etc) but I can't even imagine where to begin.

Using puppeteer to connect to individual machines and turn options there - that's crazy. Enterprise Windows are fully declarative. And using separate systems to manage Windows/Mac and Linux - that's crazy. Apple is doing what it can to support MS AD - if Linux wants to be a special case, it's going to remain a special case.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
The DE is the least interesting question of this.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
It's still a win if the person writing them costs less than the person who'd be coding, and/or if it expands the pool of people capable of making changes to the code base.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
What free software offers the enterprise features of Windows? AFAIK not even Red Hat is anywhere close to the central management features of Windows domains. Samba on Linux/Mac is severely backwards and using it is pain.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I don't understand why Amtrak - the only operator on its own tracks - is unable to make it work, meanwhile in EU you have literally thousands of private operators operating their own trains as well as combined multi-owner trains riding on tracks belonging to dozens of owners... and it works fairly well, there certainly are no 6+ hours delays, at most an hour or so for the whole multi-state 1000km trip.
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
How exactly could these costs be 0?
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This is not affiliated with SpaceX if I read the site correctly.

Super-interesting though.

Edit: Wrong, see below
differentview97
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I think the concept is, you protect yourself with the cash you earn. Similarly to SW contractors in EU.