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because I use multiple
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Not sure why DigitalOcean: Cloud computing designed for developers[^] is so rarely mentioned.
I tried basic Docker setup and found it a bit complex.
I searched around and found DigitalOcean.com and had my linux Debian droplet set up in about 5 minutes.
Amazing and only costs me $5 a month too.
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... that is great and should be repeated every year.
[I predict a steep curve for Docker.]
... such stuff as dreams are made on
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Containerisation
Find More .Net development tips at : .NET Tips
The only reason people get lost in thought is because it's unfamiliar territory.
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But I am only intending to learn, try and explore that as that one looks promising. Perhaps in most cases, I would not want to containerize anything — so my vote was I am not doing it.
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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Why single select radio buttons for multiple choices?
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The bug known as "not specified by managment" ...
Press F1 for help or google it.
Greetings from Germany
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Because learning any one of these is a lifetime task.
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Most likely an oversight. Although there are dark rumors floating around that the web admins of this site have a radio button fetish.
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And creates a whole set of new ones.
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Exactlty. Especially when the marketing guys (of the container technology, not of your company) proundly claims that "Oh, we have got a Windows version!" without telling you that you still need to be quite proficient to manage it, accept a lot of *nix'y solutions everyhwere, and it seems more like a way to telll you how great *nix is, rather than providing mechanisms with at least a remote trace of "native" feeling.
Several of the containerisation technologies that at first glance seems like a fairly simple way (as seen from the user, even though the internal workings may be complex) to solve one specific problem, that of isolating a function from its environment. But you soon realize (unless you belon to the priesthood, of course) that the "simple" solution really drags you into a complex infrastructure, new and unknown to you, that forces you to change everything, from file structures to build plans to software modularization.
Maybe that is a good thing, but noone said a word about that when they showed in that simple demo how easily a toy problem could be solved with minimal effort. And it isn't something that makes you analyze your needs and select the best solution: Rather, you are lured into mechanisms so complex and and encompassing that you quite soon are tied on your hands and feet and are forced to adopt the philosophies of the containerisation tool.
These tools are as much tools of dominance as tools for problem solution. Weapons for turf wars. Container technologies is the new kid on the block, but there are obvious similarities in e.g. how some languages force specific ways to organize the tools, how to update the tools, how to install them, how to distribute your code,... essentially, the language takes over essential parts of your file system management, tool management, source code management. It becomes sort of an operating system, more than a language.
So does containerisation: It not only isolates modules, it isolates you from your operating system, telling you "Forget that OS, do it our way instead!" That is a whole lot more than just isolating some critical functions. But they don't tell you in advance about all that you have to abandon. Or that the cost of continuing your "old ways" is so high that you cannot reasonably hold onto them, but are more or less forced to change your way of thinking to how they want you to think.
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...which are at a higher level of service than containers.
I've used them (Azure functions) but I don't know if they run containerized or directly on a VM.
Wake up! The Singularity is coming.
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