in “Russia”
aka @JWBananas@lemmy.world
aka @JWBananas@kbin.social
in “Russia”
Evil
Meanwhile, on Sync…
Because if it ain’t broke, you’re not supposed to take it apart and fix it.
You can buy Ernest a coffee. That will certainly help keep the lights on. But you should probably take a look at the recent posts on his profile.
In addition to the personal issues, he hasn’t been able to meet milestones. He gets sponsored by the same group as Lemmy’s developers, and if he isn’t reaching milestones, he isn’t getting paid. And it sounds like his savings is running out.
While money certainly helps, it sounds like it’s only the tip of the iceberg. Short of sponsoring a personal assistant and a project manager, I’m not really sure how we can help.
Some people don’t think their thoughts are good enough to warrant their own post. But they might be more receptive to making a comment.
/kbin speaks ActivityPub but is an entirely different software stack. It has some big bugs with federation (specifically around admin actions like spam removal).
The primary instance (kbin.social) also doesn’t have a very good team of mods/admins keeping up with the influx of spam.
Lemmy was about two years old when the reddit exodus happened, whereas /kbin had only been around for about a month. Its sole developer/admin is very overwhelmed just trying to keep everything running (and trying to, you know, live).
The project needs help, but I don’t think Ernest has enough trustworthy people in his circle to delegate responsibilities.
Lactase tablets are a thing.
Do high-rise apartments tend to have gas stoves? I’ve never even seen a low-rise apartment without an electric range.
Oh and the aqueducts!
The ones we’re investing tons of money to replace to remove the lead?
The vastness of the ecosystem built around Apple products cannot be understated. You can’t just change the iPhone port every few years.
Ditching the 30-pin adapter created no small degree of controversy. Though the device itself got favorable reviews, the New York Times’ tech columnist at the time called it “not just a slap in the face to loyal customers” but a “jab in the eye.”
The Lightning connector was introduced on September 12, 2012, with iPhone 5. And there was so much controversy around it that they publicly committed to using it for at least 10 years.
The USB-C spec was not finalized until nearly two years later, in August 2014.
I can’t fault a company for activity committing to a decade of compatibility with peripherals. And I certainly can’t fault them for avoiding the disaster called Micro USB.
You basically just made the case for exactly why.
Programs should be using the system resolver, not parsing that file.
The system resolver should have predictable behavior. But if other programs are doing their own DNS resolution (or otherwise predicating their functionality) based directly on the contents of resolv.conf
then their behavior will not always be consistent with the system resolver (or with how the sysadmin intended things to function).
And that can break things in subtle, unpredictable ways, which is always a headache.
Thus, on some modern systems, resolv.conf
simply declares the local systemd-resolved
instance (i.e. 127.0.0.1) and nothing else.
A single global resolv.conf file also will not let you configure different behavior based on interface or on network namespace. Want to ensure DNS lookups for specific apps occur only through your VPN-specific DNS servers but all other apps only use the normal system resolvers (i.e. no leaking from either side of the divide)? Want to also ensure DNS lookups for those specific apps fail when the VPN is down (again, as opposed to leaking)? systemd-resolved
has your back.
And before anyone asks, yes, I am aware there are other, more crude and convoluted ways to do that with e.g. iptables (just like you can use crude, inconsistent init.d spaghetti scripts to manage services). It’s just one single real-world example.
A single global resolv.conf file also will not let you configure different behavior based on interface or on network namespace.
The point is to configure everything using consistent, predictable configuration files and syntax, and to ensure consistent, predictable behavior.
But if you ultimately still want resolv.conf.d
back, then your distro of choice undoubtedly provides a way to do so.
Cloud-init is fairly well documented:
But if you do not need it (and if you’re configuring DNS by hand, it doesn’t sound like you do), you can disable it entirely:
https://cloudinit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/howto/disable_cloud_init.html
resolv.conf
itself should be managed by systemd-resolved
on any modern Ubuntu Server release. And that service will use the DNS settings provided by netplan
.
With cloud-init disabled, you should have the freedom to create/edit configuration files in /etc/netplan
and apply changes with netplan apply
.
Yes.
“There’s one line I cut at the end of this episode when the Vendorians show up and they’re like, ‘Give them a little minute.’ Originally, they said ‘… after this, it gets a lot harder for them.”’ The Vendorians kind of know where it goes and I cut it in the edit because it was such a beautiful friendship moment at the end of the episode. I didn’t want to fly in the ointment at the end, it just felt wrong. It felt right on the page, but people are only going to have to wait a week to find out for themselves to see it… It’s better to end on a happy note.”
That’s more of Brother doing things correctly. Mine automatically shows up on all my Windows systems too.
cannon*
Here’s some sugar for you
Clearly if you turn the image upside-down, it is a Whale-Gnome-Dustbuster-Pharaoh in the architectural style of the Goa’uld/Ancient Ancients with a blowhole-mouth surprise.
But I’m leaning toward Dustbuster, now that we know it’s Hoovering up ships.
TL;DR ChatGPT = What to Expect When Expecting
Nickelback