Pikainen googlaus löysi keskisuomalaisen uutisen, jossa mainitaan että edellinen (oletetan, yksityiskohdat maksun takana) kerta olisi vuodelta 2003 ja edustajana Tony Halme. Että ei tosian kovin usein ja Halmeen edeltäjää saa varmaan hakea jostain 60-70 luvulta.
I don’t know where the Debian project is based.
Trademark and at least some copyright for the project is owned by an entity in the New York and Ian Murdoch who started the project was US citizen. But calling the whole project as USA based is wrong, it is based 'on the internet' as even the core team is spread across the globe.
I'm pretty sure it's a bug somewhere in Lemmy and not technically speaking an issue on the server itself. It's slow for me too every now and then, few times a week or so for couple hours, regardless of what I'm doing.
Think a large office space or industrial application with several hundred (or thousands) of hosts connected to the network. Some of them need to be isolated from the internet and/or rest of the network, some need only access to the internet, some need internet and local services and so on.
With that kind of setup you could just run separate cables and unmanaged switches for every different type of network you have and have the router manage where each of those can talk to. However, that would be pretty difficult to change or expand while being pretty expensive as you need a ton of hardware and cabling to do it. Instead you use VLANs which kinda-sorta split your single hardware switch into multiple virtual ones and you can still manage their access from a single router.
If you replace all the switches with routers they're quite a bit more expensive and there's not too many routers with 24 or 48 ports around. And additonally router configuration is more complex than just telling the switch that 'ports 1-10 are on vlan id 5 and ports 15-20 are on id 8'. With dozens of switches that adds up pretty fast. And while you could run most routers as a switch you'll just waste your money with that.
VLANs can be pretty useful in home environment too, but they're mostly used in bigger environments.
Wikipedia lists a total of 14000 tanks, reserves included, (majority being T-72 and modernized variants) + unknown number of T-54 and T-64. I suppose even the russians don't know how many of those are in combat ready shape by any stretch, but apparently at least a half (not counting ones they've bought from elsewhere).
So, as the war has been going for two years that 1-2 years more sounds plausible. If current news are anything to go by I'm quite afraid that Ukraine doesn't have that much unless they really start receiving reinforcements from Europe and US. And should Ukraine collapse it would take 5-10(ish) years for Russia to rebuild enough hardware to do the very same thing with some other country. Maybe not with a NATO country and maybe not one the global west is as interested as Ukraine, but it could (or would, depending on which prediction you want to follow) happen.
Plus the wild card of China, who no doubt are following the situation and spesifically western response pretty closely. I wonder what happened to those 800 000 artillery shells Czechs promised to gather...
According to minusrus they've lost 7193 tanks out of 3300 Russia had before the war started. I sincerely hope that the article is correct, but so far they've been able to replace lost hardware with a decent rate with manufacturing and presumably purchasing from their allies.
One can hope that the current massive attack ends with the Swan Lake on Russian tv's, but right now I'm more worried if Ukraine can hold the lines long enough for that to happen. They really need reinforcements, it's pretty difficult to fight a war without ammunition.
Montakohan järjestelmää maasta löytyy, jotka ei ymmärrä desimaalilukua alvissa. Tuo on kuitenkin pikaisen wikipediavilkaisun mukaan ollut aina kokonaisluku siitä lähtien kun koko alvia on peritty 1994 lähtien.
Ruokaan, lääkkeisiin, liikuntapalveluihin ja kulttuuriin 4% korotus. Tahtoo meidän lapsiperheen kauppareissuilla sanoa karkeasti reilu 20€ korotusta kuukaudessa jos kärry täyttyy jatkossakin samoilla tuotteilla.
Tuo yleisen kannan 1,5% korotus tekee meidän mökissä äkkiä haarukoituna jotain 20-40€ välistä kuukaudessa. Omalla kohtaa tilanne on sen verran onnellinen että ei tuohon nyt maailma kaadu, mutta se 500/vuosi on tietysti jostain muusta kulutuksesta pois, jolloin mm. tapahtumajärjestäjät jäävät kyllä yhä useammin nuolemaan näppejään ainakin minun lompakon kohdalta.
Enkä nyt sano, että valtiontaloutta ajatellessa tuo muutos yksinään on välttämättä aivan paskin mahdollinen, mutta muiden tukien kiristyessä ei kyllä käy yhtään kateeksi yksinhuoltajia, pätkätyöläisiä, opiskelijoita ja muita pienituloisia. Ja hieman olen skeptinen näiden keinojen toimivuudesta työllisyystilanteen parantamiseksi ja valtiontalouden elvyttämiseksi pidemmässä juoksussa.
I'm tempted to say systemd-ecosystem. Sure, it has it's advantages and it's the standard way of doing things now, but I still don't like it. Journalctl is a sad and poor replacement from standard log files, it has a ton of different stuff which used to be their separate own little things (resolved, journald, crontab...) making it pretty monolithic thing and at least for me it fixed a problem which wasn't there.
Snapcraft (and flatpack to some extent) also attempts to fix a non-existing problem and at least for me they have caused more issues than any benefits.
It's been a while (few years actually) since I even tried, but bluetooth headsets just won't play nicely. You either get the audio quality from a bottom of the barrel or somewhat decent quality without microphone. And the different protocol/whatever isn't selected automatically, headset randomly disconnects and nothing really works like it does with my cellphone/windows-machines.
YMMV, but that's been my experience with my headsets. I've understood that there's some propietary stuff going on with audio codecs, but it's just so frustrating.
The command in question recursively changes file ownership to account "user" and group "user" for every file and folder in the system. With linux, where many processes are run as root and on various other accounts (like apache or www-data for web server, mysql for MySql database and so on) and after that command none of the services can access the files they need to function. And as the whole system is broken on a very fundamental level changing everything back would be a huge pain in the rear.
On this ubuntu system I'm using right now I have 53 separate user accounts for various things. Some are obsolete and not in use, but majority are used for something and 15 of them are in active use for different services. Different systems have a bit different numbers, but you'd basically need to track down all the millions of files on your computer and fix each of their permission by hand. It can be done, and if you have similar system to copy privileges from you could write a script to fix most of the things, but in vast majority of cases it's easier to just wipe the drive and reinstall.
Ihan kokonaan itse asian vierestä täytyy tosin todeta että sivusto palauttaa tuon koodauksen headereissa, eli vika on lemmyn päässä kun ei tulkkaa noita oikein. Tuommoisen korjaaminen ei tosin taida olla ihan hirvittävän korkealla prioriteettilistalla, veikkaan että vähintään 95% tapauksista meene oikein kun vain kylmän viileästi olettaa UTF-8a ilman mitään tarkistuksia. Ja jos tuon meinaisi oikeasti korjata niin pitäisi katsoa sitä ihan sisältöä, kun sellaisiakin sivustoja varmasti löytyy jotka ilmoittavat otsikkotiedoissa koodaukseksi jotain mutta todellisuudessa sylkevät ulos jotain ihan muuta.