Comment Re:Logs via network (Score 1) 347
What are you even talking about? journalctl -a -f will output the logs straight from memory.
What are you even talking about? journalctl -a -f will output the logs straight from memory.
Plants also aerobically respirate O2 and emit CO2 at night. They are not pure CO2 sucking machines.
No I'm pretty comfortable saying the Baby Boomers are uniquely the worst and Gen X is just the children who never had a chance to learn better.
Once they die and Gen X has it's tantrum over all the aged-care benefits they're not going to get because of the screwed up workforce dynamics the Baby Boomers led to, all of sudden all the usual castigators of the young will switch their tune to be all about socialism and welfare.
The latest generation works harder, for longer hours,
Not according to what my grandparents have told me.
Your grandparents lived in a time when you got a job, held it for the rest of your life if you wanted to, and from that earned an income to support a stay-at-home spouse and multiple children.
Blah blah blah so clearly we should do nothing because I am so sure I will soon be rich and it would be terrible to have to think of my community once that happens.
Your cynicism is neither helpful, nor deserved, nor insightful and reeks of privilege.
Old people are different than young people. Naturally, each group believes that the differences in question make them superior to the other group.
True in many ways....HOWEVER,
Everything else you wrote from this point on is exactly the same thing that was, has and will be said for thousands of years prior and henceforth.
Freedom of expression is not freedom from criticism.
Actually the thing journalctl does really well is the ability to log onto a machine and run journalctl -f and get every log the machine is running on the local console immediately. It's a boon when you're doing remote logging because you don't get stuck with issues like buffering causing your logs to come in big unwieldy bursts.
Your watch is *definitely* not waterproof to 100 meters. Those depth marking do not mean what you think they do: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W...
Wi-fi is not reliable enough, doubly so in crowded airspace around apartment blocks and the like. This would be much more attractive if it let me go RJ45 -> Stick -> TV.
Batteries yes, but rocket's have huge reserves or kerosene and operate at high temperature. You could integrate a solid-oxide fuel cell as an energy stage (80% efficiency) and keep the stack warm with exhaust heat.
But it uses all of them, which makes it easier to spot errors, discrepancies, and agendas, which can then be the focus of additional investigation.
Poor soul thinks that Wikipedia editors actually "investigate" content with the intent of spotting errors, discrepancies, and agendas. News flash: most Wikipedia editors "challenge" content with the intent of inserting their own agendas. Period.
As opposed to people who complain about wikipedia can can't possibly have agendas?
Color me skeptical when various political factions are consistently complaining that "the media" is against them.
is that why you don't post your opinion on a public comments website?
Body cameras would go a long way to providing hard, tangible evidence that would let us get rid of the "few bad cops". Because trying to have the police self-police based on heresay absolutely does not work (high school is a sad prototype for life: everyone knew who the bully was, but guess what's always worse and dangerous: being the guy who tries to call him out on it).
On top of that, all trials of them show that the actual rate of false allegations against police plummets when they're used - it's a win-win.
Two places: people's lives aren't in danger with centrifuges. Them breaking is the same as any other mechanical stoppage of a plant. The choice of operating system, as a result, for the types of PLC controllers which are used, is quite different and subject to different selection requirements then an aircraft's flight systems.
A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson