

You’re right. I wouldn’t, but someone did for me!
You’re right. I wouldn’t, but someone did for me!
Walk away and find a not incompetent lawyer.
Send him docx files and tell him if he can’t work with modern files he needs to fix it. It’s like $30/mo for an office subscription. There’s no excuse for him being so cheap.
Major update? 1 hour. Minor update? 1 hour.
Install Thefuck to help when you screw up commands.
Get a load of this guy, thinking containers are more of a hassle than VMs!
Easy fleet management tools
Linux is the king of fleet management tools.
It’s low risk because there’s a large cost to infiltrating your laptop physically, which greatly reduces the credibility of the threat, unless you’re someone with geopolitical importance. It’s easier for a threat actor to just steal/buy all your information from hacking huge datasets or break in through some unpatched vulnurability.
Sure, but how many foods are we talking here? This sounds like probably <20 rows on a sheet, with columns for ingredients.
Tracking a single cat doesn’t seem like DB work
Why wouldn’t a simple spreadsheet and some pivot tables work?
It sounds like you’re working towards building change management governance, and you are potentially looking for an enterprise resource planner “ERP”. ServiceNow, Atlassian and Oodo are a few examples of these. CIO/CISO/Enterprise Architecture and IT Business organization consultants are some of the likely personas to help get this set up correctly.
Depending on the size of your shop, and since this is the in cybersecurity, you may want to look at your overall IT governance structure. Gaps in your governance can lead to some big security and GRC holes and the lens of cybersecurity is the right view to drive change.
There’s not much cost with S3 object. It’s just a file system in Linux, and replication is a protocol standard.
Use object storage for media and backups, then use s3 replication to put a copy somewhere else.
Get a second pc and a kvm switch
I did 100TB, 100 streams of 1TB, all simultaneous with rsync
Red Hat, because it’s free for developers and used by a lot of enterprises.
Did you report doordash to the police?