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This is non-persistent and after reboot this seboolean will be set back to 0. You must use -P flag to make it persistent.


You right, of course. Thanks for noting it! Too late to edit.


And to make it even more confusing there is also http://snapper.io/


Do you have any evidence or source that proves your claims about radioactive bee bread in Latvia and Lithuania? These countries actually were not affected that much. Much less than Scandinavia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_disaster#National_an...

You should actually be worried about pesticides which kills bees and poisons bee honey and bread https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pesticide_toxicity_to_bees


Its strange where radioactive particles end up. In the Black Forest its in fungi that grow on trees, a favorite food of wild board. So all wild boar taken in the Black Forest must be tested with a Geiger counter before the meat can be sold! Over 500 REMS (?) and no sale.


That is not quite true. They have soho product group: http://routerboard.com/products/group/20


The newer firmware also has a single-page setup that let you set the WAN/LAN IP, DHCP server and other basic stuff with ease.

Basic port forwarding is still interesting - it's simple once you understand MikroTik, but there's a learning curve.


I haven't spent much time in the "Quickset" page...I learned it before they had that function and it never seems to do what I want it to.

Probably is handy for some basic configurations though.


I was not aware they were marketing in that direction...imo they shouldn't be, for the reasons listed by others. The UI just isn't quite intuitive enough for the average-joe that's expecting something like a Linksys/Beldin interface.


You should also tweak your guide for RHEL7 based distros. Things like journald, firewalld etc. Also remember that in RHEL7 sysctl and security.conf are configured a little bit different now.

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 Security Guide is a good reference.


If possible better both common Linux variants: RHEL/CentOS and Debian/Ubuntu.


While it sounds like a nice gesture, it is quite dangerous actually. Maybe this generation of norwegians don't mind to give away part of their country but next generation will do. They might demand to give it back for some reason and here you go - endless disputes and friendship turns in hatred.


That kind of thinking produces a race to the bottom. "Let's not be good-hearted, because our children might be jerks and resent us for it."

The solution to this is not to reach for the lowest common denominator, but to aim high (and raise decent children).


I think the area is small enough to be measured in square meters...


From the article: 0.015 km^2.


https://cyberduck.io/

They have some issues with SSL certificate, though.


Cyberduck refuses to implement a two pane interface with a local browser.

https://trac.cyberduck.io/ticket/2778

Juggling multiple windows is really annoying. The entire UI is awful besides that also.


I don't know why you were downvoted, will check it, thanks.


That list is incomplete. It is missing the whole colonialism era and genocide of indigenous people https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocide_of_indigenous_peoples

Especially Spanish colonization of the Americas: It is estimated that during the Spanish conquest of the Americas up to eight million indigenous people died, marking the first large-scale act of genocide of the modern era


I really would like to hear his opinion about this. Is this how he imagined Ansible when he started this project?


Hi! Thanks for the nice words, folks!

Wasn't thinking of saying much but I'll chime in just once.

Was it what I expected when I started? nah, I remember when I thought having a IRC channel with 30 people was crazy-insanely huge, it took off at completely unexpected rates. Just to get some early looks at it from Seth Vidal and Jeremy Katz (and a commit or two!) was awesome enough for me at the time. It wasn't engineered with the idea that it would be a business at that point at all.

BTW, extremly huge thanks for this really should also go to all the contributors out there and people that helped spread ansible around, that was completely unpredictable and a lot of fun watching it take off, especially stuff like seeing so many AM tweets in Japanese and then trying to translate them, or seeing someone automate random vending machines or electronics projects. This got built trying to help people like you, so a huge thanks for all of the input and help!

Anyway, those words mean a lot, and I greatly appreciate them.


Congratulations, and thanks for making a simple automation tool that I have come to love!

You guys definitely were very active in the community. Enough for the likes of me to also become an active tweet-er. I was pretty excited when @tybstar (Tim Gerla), Ansible's co-founder, chimed in once. I hope you guys share some chunk of the sale with him too! ;)


Thanks and congrats! I have been using Ansible since version 0.2 when there were like 5 modules. Since then I have introduced and promoted it to every company I have been working for. Well done!


Congratulations!

Also thanks for the way you managed the project. Ansible was the first big, well known Open Source project that I contributed to, and it was in great part due to the effort you put in welcoming everybody in the IRC channel and mailing list.

Well done!


Congrats man! Your IRC Q&A sessions (even on weekends!) were always a huge help and very appreciated. Thanks for such a great product and good luck in the future.


Here's one more big thank-you to you and everyone else who made Ansible what it is: excellent. Congratulations!


Great job and congratulations!



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