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profwalkstr

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Debian to require Rust as of May 2026

lwn.net
5 points·by profwalkstr·9 mesi fa·1 comments

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 10 released

lwn.net
10 points·by profwalkstr·anno scorso·0 comments

CentOS Stream 10 and EPEL 10 released

lwn.net
22 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·1 comments

Now CockroachDB Ditches Open-Source License

news.itsfoss.com
1 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·2 comments

Ask HN: Has your company switched from Ubuntu due to security patch gatekeeping?

13 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·1 comments

Canonical Saw $251M in Revenue Last Year, Grew to More Than 1K Employees

phoronix.com
2 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·0 comments

VirtualBox 7.1 Beta: Modernized GUI, Wayland Support for Clipboard Sharing

phoronix.com
14 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·8 comments

Red Hat Announces RHEL AI

phoronix.com
29 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·8 comments

AlmaLinux forms engineering steering committee

lwn.net
2 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·0 comments

Nvidia Open GPU Linux Kernel Driver Soon Be the Default for Turing, Newer GPUs

phoronix.com
45 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·10 comments

Rocky Linux to Support Upstream Stable Kernels

phoronix.com
2 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·0 comments

Ask HN: LXD vs. Libvirt vs. Boxes vs. VirtualBox for dev work: which is easier?

3 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·2 comments

Ask HN: Why hasn't OnlyOffice see higher adoption than LibreOffice?

16 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·13 comments

Another Runc Container Breakout

lwn.net
5 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·2 comments

OpenZFS Native Encryption Use Raises Data Corruption Concerns

phoronix.com
4 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·0 comments

Critical vulnerability affecting most Linux distros allows for bootkits

arstechnica.com
3 points·by profwalkstr·2 anni fa·0 comments

Ask HN: In 2024, become an expert in Docker or Podman?

9 points·by profwalkstr·3 anni fa·7 comments

Ask HN: RPMs or DEBs? Which is easier for devs to package their apps?

2 points·by profwalkstr·3 anni fa·2 comments

Ask HN: Why Debian and Ubuntu make Apache config so complicated and split up?

3 points·by profwalkstr·3 anni fa·3 comments

Debian Unveiled: The Gold Standard of Linux Stability

linuxiac.com
6 points·by profwalkstr·3 anni fa·0 comments

comments

profwalkstr
·2 anni fa·discuss
No, they also have desktop apps. Even as Flatpaks and Snaps
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
After reading your comment, I disabled apparmor and restarted but the issue still persists. So in my case it's not that.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
I’m from Brazil and I’m a Hetzner client. Have several dedicated servers and several cloud instances with them.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
For me, due to health reasons/disability, it’s got to be 100% remote.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
I think Dell went downhill after the acquisition, their hardware quality is junk all across their line: servers, workstations, laptops, monitors, etc. Every device from them that I had my hands on recently have, at best, terrible build quality, and at worst, multiple failures. And their support is a bad joke.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
According to downdetector, it looks it is
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
Free for personal use, not workplace.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
It feels as if Google is intentionally trying to sabotage its own cloud business
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
What happened?
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
More details: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/[email protected]...
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
Shocked about the prices. Outside of AWS/Azure/GCP, many companies offer bare-metal dedicated server, with very high specs and would cost a lot less (around $40-60) per month. And they can be used as remote workstations.

I myself use a Hetzner server as a remote workstation, which I connect via RDP. 12 cores Intel processor, 64 GB RAM, 2x1 TB HDD and 2x512 GB SSD for US$ 60. If there’s any hardware issue it’s their problem and they will fix it really quickly, so I don’t have to worry about it.

GCP/Azure/AWS prices are insane.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
There was a thread asking this a month ago, here's what I wrote then:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35618726
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
MySQL has a lot of gotchas, WTF moments, things that don't make sense and seem overly and needlessly complicated compared to PostgreSQL.

- Take data types, for example. Seems something simple, right? You can grok all data types in PostgreSQL in an afternoon. Want to grok MySQL data types? You're going to waste an entire week to grok them. There are multiple data types that seem to do the same thing with very small differences and a lot of incompatibilities... and a lot of exceptional behavior (see point below). MySQL data types are LESS powerful, less flexible and 10x more complicated than PostgreSQL data types.

- Enums and sets need to have their possible values defined on a table by table basis. What a nightmare to keep them in sync. PostgreSQL allows you to this once for the whole DB.

- Open MySQL manual and it's full of passages like: feature A does "blah" if X mode is enabled, but does "bar" if mode Y is enabled and will corrupt data if storage engine is used with mode Z enabled.

- SQL strict mode can be disabled by the client. You cannot enforce that your server will work only with SQL strict mode on because a client can simply open a connection with SQL strict mode off. There's no way to enforce that clients will only use SQL strict mode. You have to trust your clients. (This other comment explains strict mode: https://www.reddit.com/r/PostgreSQL/comments/xblooo/comment/...)

- According to the manual, if client A does stuff with strict mode on and client B does stuff with strict mode off, data corruption will occur.

- A lot of surprising and unexpected behavior, even with SQL Strict mode on

- String comparison is case insensitive. There are workarounds but they are still workarounds.

- A lot of behavior is dependent on server configuration. So switching between servers you can't expect them to behave the same.

- Behavior not standardized among versions and installs

- Changing the server SQL mode after creating and inserting data into partitioned tables can cause major changes in the behavior of such tables, and could lead to loss or corruption of data

- Useless error messages (see https://www.reddit.com/r/PostgreSQL/comments/xblooo/comment/...)

- MySQL, at the same time it is less powerful and flexible, has a lot more levers and knobs than PostgreSQL. PostgreSQL, while more powerful and flexible, conceptually is a lot simpler than MySQL.

- PostgreSQL stays out of your way; with MySQL you’re constantly fighting it

PostgreSQL -> simplicity

MySQL -> complexity
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
More details here:

https://packetstormsecurity.com/files/171409/GS2023032117320...
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
I’d rather use time.cloudflare.com. Given Google’s history, we never know when they might discontinue it and send it to the graveyard.
profwalkstr
·3 anni fa·discuss
I migrated from GA to Plausible.io and I’m very happy with it.
profwalkstr
·4 anni fa·discuss
If it’s an option, learn Mercurial, Fossil or Sapling instead of Git. They have sane UIs unlike Git.
profwalkstr
·4 anni fa·discuss
I also investigated Fossil and it's a very interesting VCS, but it seems too opinionated with its workflow though.
profwalkstr
·4 anni fa·discuss
Very interesting, I hope it takes off!
profwalkstr
·4 anni fa·discuss
No, not astroturfing. Just hoping we could be closer to the day the git monoculture ends.