Woman in my cottagecore group posted she found this at her local thrift shop and basically she's about to be murdered by a haunted dress and painting. pic.twitter.com/ZN8eY7idiO— Rad Tasia, Powerful and Dynamic (@GroovyTasia) May 6, 2021
Back to Basics: The History of IP Interface Addresses « ipSpace.net blog
In the previous blog post in this series, we figured out that you might not need link-layer addresses on point-to-point links. We also started exploring whether you need network-layer addresses on individual interfaces but didn’t get very far. We’ll fix that today and discover the secrets behind IP address-per-interface design. In the early days of computer networking, there were three common addressing paradigms:
Magic, persistence, imagination and more | Seth's Blog
Magic first: Acar and the folks at Penguin are offering a limited-edition deck of special cards to go with The Practice. It launched today. Persistence: Today is the 200th episode of my podcast Aki…
Basecamp Management Somehow Less Self-Aware Than Andrew Yang In the lead-up to the Chappelle Show sketch ‘When Keepin’ It Real Goes Wrong’, Dave Chappelle gives the following pretty great advice: “It’s good to be real sometimes. It’s good to be phony sometimes. Yes, I said it. Phony! You think I’m this nice in real life? F$ck that son!”
Minding The Gaps Between Software Development And Production
People in cities around the world who use subways to move around will often see or hear the warning to “mind the gap” – or something similar – a caution
Maintaining Data Resiliency in the Age of Kubernetes – The New Stack
New approaches to applications call for new approaches to data management. Ten years ago, many organizations could stay on top of their data with traditional databases, data warehouses and data recovery methodologies. Today, data is being tightly coupled with applications through Linux containers. Increasingly, those containers are being orchestrated through Kubernetes, which, according to the…
Words of wisdom from Satoru Iwata, Nintendo's legendary CEO | Boing Boing
[This is from my Substack newsletter, The Magnet – Mark] Satoru Iwata (1959-2015) was Nintendo’s beloved fourth president and CEO. A new book, Ask Iwata, collects interviews with him to form …
AsyncAPI Could Be the Default API Format for Event-Driven Architectures – The New Stack
"Imagination is the Discovering Faculty, pre-eminently. It is that which penetrates into the unseen worlds around us, the worlds of Science." Ada Lovelace Imagination is the determining factor that precedes invention, the creation of things. As Ada Lovelace pointed out to us, before conceiving, one must imagine. Hegel, a little earlier, had again noted the…
Meroxa Aims to Provide the Easy Button for Data Pipelines – The New Stack
After listening to customer challenges with data pipelines while at Heroku, DeVaris Brown and Ali Hamidi decided to take on those pain points when Heroku changed strategic directions. That became the basis for their company Meroxa. “They left a huge void in the marketplace. As you're probably familiar with, Heroku has basically become synonymous with…
Resolutely refusing to accept a conventional understanding is a statement of certainty. That’s different from honest skepticism. The skeptic offers an open mind and is clear about what would …
I hope that a simple Hello World example can at least give you a rough idea of how LA can be applied in programming. I won't dwell on the theory; let's see w...
The kernel's BPF virtual machine allows programs loaded from user space to be safely run in the kernel's context. That functionality would be of limited use, however, without the ability for those programs to interact with the rest of the kernel. The interface between BPF and the kernel has been kept narrow for a number of good reasons, including safety and keeping the kernel in control of the system. The 5.13 kernel, though, contains a feature that could, over time, widen that interface considerably: the ability to directly call kernel functions from BPF programs.