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Explain to your manager that if an employee can merge code without reviews, he should expect breakages on regular basis.

Propose that your team can get meet to talk about how to make the process better, so no breakages occur.

Mention personal responsibility and knowledge - it’s a good practice that a person who wrote the latest code changes either helps either is responsible for making the service working again, if there are issues - specifically because they might have some idea what’s broken.

If your manager will ignore it, I’d start looking.

Is it about Krita being on steam not for free?

If I’d use krita on regular basis I’d be happy to support the devs. Also, the license is the same.

I’m not sure you’ll get nice performance in local network with small appliances. I’ve never got sub-ms network disk access on 1Gbps switch and router over NFS. In the end I’ve done the opposite - I’ve added one k8s host with a lot of storage, and any storage services are deployed there. All the other k8s services rely on local SSD.

Open a console with top/htop and check if it will be visible when the system halts.

From my experience it looks like out of memory situation and some process starts swapping like crazy, or a faulty hdd that tries to read some part of the disk over and over again without success.

There probably is a clever way that you could do it, but clever ways are easy to overstep, misconfigure and can be unreliable long-term.

His arguments are „we don’t know how brains work, we don’t know how conscience works, but we also don’t know how quantum mechanics could enable conscience, so it’s definitely the thing”.

It’s a trope that comes up every now and then: if we don’t know, then it’s definitely quantum mechanics.

Congratulations, now your „password” (the 512-byte random key file) is stored as plaintext on your machine :)

With rate-limiting, non-trivial passwords are not viable to be brute-forced, so making them larger just doesn’t give you much.

I’m running ZFS mirror on Ubuntu on a USFF machine with 2 external USB 2.5’’ drives. I do weekly scrubs, never lost any data even during power loss. Some of the 2.5’’ USB drivers are crap, I had to replace drive 2 times over last 5 years - while one of the drives is with me since the beginning.

I would say that a lot of people over-secure their local home file storage. If you use filesystem (or software) that does checksumming, your home data will be safe. Yeah, in case of power loss you may lose like 2s of last writes on ext4, and that won’t matter much for majority of people because it’s not like it’s your company’s only copy of internal data.

Rage Against Be Machine?
But his account name starts with „real”