I did 100TB, 100 streams of 1TB, all simultaneous with rsync
I did 100TB, 100 streams of 1TB, all simultaneous with rsync
Red Hat, because it’s free for developers and used by a lot of enterprises.
If you have enough users and systems that this is a problem then you should be centrally managing it. I get that you want to inventory what you have, but I’m saying that you’re probably doing it wrong right now, and your ask is solved by using a central IAM system.
It sounds like you’re probably looking for some kind of SAML compliant IAM system, where credentials and access can be centrally managed. Active Directory and LDAP are examples of that.
So you would be using CoW in-memory in this case?
Is there a benefit to doing CoW with Pandas vs. offloading it to the storage? Practically all modern storage systems support CoW snaps. The pattern I’m used to (Infra, not big data) is to leverage storage APIs to offload storage operations from client systems.
OpenShift Virtualization
Well, 1ms of latency is 300km of distance, so unless you have something really misconfigured or overloaded, or you’re across the country, latency shouldn’t be an issue. 10-20ms is normally the high water mark for most synchronous replication, so you can go a long way before a protocol like DNS becomes an issue.
The whole point of Asimov’s three laws were to show how they could never work in reality because it would be very easy to circumvent them.
It’s not really done better in the cloud if you can push the compute out to the device. When you can leverage edge hardware you save bandwidth fees and a ton of cloud costs. It’s faster in the cloud because you can leverage a cluster with economies of scale, but any AI company would prefer the end-user to pay for that compute instead, if they can service requests adequately.
Why replace Hashi if you’re in the RH or IBM ecosystem? Why replace it at all if you’re an enterprise? They have enterprise support.
I’m sure enterprises are just running for the door, just like they did when IBM bought Red Hat. Also Hashicorp. Enterprises are going to dump Terraform because it’s closed source and owned by IBM
Theres already a ton of datasets that have been stolen that won’t benefit from new encryption standards. Steal now, decrypt later.
“Let me explain something to you aight, We got to get’er half naked, and put her out front center stage and that’s going to make y’all billionaires, because America loves hot white jailbait ass.”
-Family guy like 20 years ago
PCIe is a bottleneck on large GPU systems. NVIDIA developed the NVLink protocol, which is way faster, to interconect GPUs and GPU systems on NDR400 Infiniband networks.
Microsoft Planner. It integrates well with thr rest of the M365 suite, and work pays for it, so whatever.
The point of the first three books was that arbitrary rules like the three laws of robotics were pointless. There was a ton of grey area not covered by seemingly ironclad rules and robots could either logicically choose or be manipulated into breaking them. Robots, in all of the books, operate in a purely amoral manner.
This guy didn’t read the robot series.
I was gonna say this is my favorite, with IRCn on top. It’s been a while since I connected. Is EFNet still around?
Get a second pc and a kvm switch