Well, there is this one thing: they asked OpenSuse to drop the Suse branding…
Oh wow. That is harsh.
These are the payment scales in the Dutch government: https://www.caorijk.nl/cao-rijk/hoofdstuk-6/salarisschalen
My sector is scale 10 or 11 depending on starting experience. 10 grows a bit faster the first few years to reflect a junior position.
Maybe government IT in Germany is low stress. Maybe the average in my country is also. But my department surely isn’t low stress. Could be because I work at a research institute that has been leading the charge into public cloud?
From the department of temporary fixes, becoming a permanent solution. This guy made FAT32: https://youtu.be/bikbJPI-7Kg?si=orQCjxmnOPAhKIeu
Oh. But my quote wasn’t anecdote: it is the title of a study. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2352250X17300611?via%3Dihub
Than you have never been in a conflict with someone close to you before. Which is something to be envious for.
Hurt people hurt people.
Germans.
Totally accepting it is my system being slow. It is a openwrt router after all.
Also taking f2fs for a spin.
As far as I have experienced (I didn’t measure this): don’t use that partition for container layers. It might just be my system, but f2fs has slowed my container engine down a bit.
Ah. Thanks for clarifying.
It read like we should age the pans before use like a fine wine. But this makes way more sense.
[…] and don’t use it for two decades, […]
You mean that a pan has to age? Or is it a burn.
There is a “Your mum” joke in there.
Your mum is so fat, that bitcoin miners litigated to keep abusing her power grid.
We also “drop” decisions, which means the total opposite of what you would think.
It means a decision has been made.
Huh. Misschien zat ik vast in een Dunglish vertaalslag.
Edit: Snelle Google laat zien dat we zeker later tot een besluit kunnen komen. We laten ze ook af en toe vallen. We nemen, geven en breken deze ook.
I’m Dutch and we “come to” a decision.
Quiet firing, if you will.