We went to Peace Arch Park several times during COVID to visit relatives in Canada. And then I noticed the tents on the eastern edge of the park. What's that all about? I called it the End Zone. Couples separated by the border would meet there. One park ranger said he saw things he couldn't unsee...
Here's an example of how to build a simple Alpine Linux container using Apple's containerization CLI. It also demonstrates how to connect to the container through Tailscale SSH using a Tailscale auth key stored in Apple Keychain:
The macOS app manages the host Tailscale service, while this example demonstrates how to connect with a *macOS container* using Tailscale SSH based on the Tailscale service under userspace networking mode. This gives the container its own dedicated Tailnet IP and identity without needing to port-forward through the host.
edit: For example, I can create a container on my MacBook to run an application. A colleague *in my Tailnet* can then connect to this container to interact with that application from a coffeeshop or airliner while not exposing the rest of my MacBook.
Apple Earbuds cost $19 while AirPods Pro 3 cost $250. If one of the pods flies out of your ear on the Fremont Bridge, it's a pretty bad day. I should get over it.
You can also load your hearing test results (from either an audiologist or a hearing test app like https://mimi.io/products/mimi-hearing-test-app) into Apple Health and then use them with your Earbuds.
I think we're dealing with garden variety snobbery here. A great school, like a great teacher, is a school that makes a difference in people's lives. If it takes people who could have worked in a factory and gives them a leg up to a better living, then we should celebrate that kind of school. The point of the article is that circumstances have changed in a way that undermines the ability of school like WKU to deliver this kind of possibility.
I agree & the same is true for local colleges but most people are more concerned w/ the perception of prestige that their degree will grant them than the quality of the books in the university/college library that can expand their intellectual horizon.
Ubuntu ships OpenZFS as a separate prebuilt kernel module for ZFS (zfs-dkms). Interestingly, they also have ZFS support in GRUB to support booting from ZFS:
* read-only and minimal
* fully aware of different Linux boot environments
* GPLv3 license compatible, clean-room implementation by the OpenSolaris/Illumos team. The implementation predates Ubuntu’s interest.
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