HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

_muff1nman_

no profile record

comments

_muff1nman_
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
We haven't shared a whole lot yet (hoping to do more) but one that fits within administration of k8s is https://blog.cloudflare.com/automatic-remediation-of-kuberne...
_muff1nman_
·3 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
This article is mistaken from the get-go as an operator is not the same as an apiservice. Rather an operator is a wider term for something that includes a controller. See https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/extend-kubernetes/operat...

Also it's important for people reading this article - an apiservice (which this article talks about) is very rarely something that should be done. An operator is more appropriate for nearly all cases except for when you truly need your state stored outside of the internal Kubernetes etcd datastore.
_muff1nman_
·4 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I ran CentOS on the desktop for many years. It was a very nice, solid setup that I could rely on updating without sweating about an upgrade breaking something. I've recently switched to fedora in light of recent CentOS 8 shenanigans but CentOS 7 was wonderful at the time.
_muff1nman_
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
I didn't disagree that sometimes it makes sense to get out of your vehicle if the road is all iced up and one is worried about a trucker crushing into you due to fog. Rather I'm more refuting the following statement:

> unless you're truly in no mans land without any reachable alternatives for shelter, it's best to lock up the vehicle with a note on the dash and make your way to a shelter out of harms way

The presence of anecdotes that conflict each other is evidence that it is hard to make blanket statements like the above although I would still argue that the default should be stay in or near your vehicle during winter weather related emergencies. Also any anecdotes about AI related disasters are off topic ;)
_muff1nman_
·5 ปีที่แล้ว·discuss
This is still really bad advice. There was a recent instance not a year ago where folks were stuck with 3 feet of snow at night on an interstate interchange. Yes there was a hotel not a mile from where they were but getting out of your car to cross the interstate in 3 feet of snow is a great way to get hit or get lost in the blizzard and get some good hypothermia. Compare this to staying in their car where they were picked up by highway patrol in a snow cat a few hours later and taken to a shelter. And its not some stroke of luck either, highway patrol knows to go look for people in their cars with the snow cat and do it nearly every year. They do not know to look for you in a drift of snow over the side of the highway.