I just did the same thing with llama and got the same thing
I just did the same thing with llama and got the same thing
Woman are talking to me some yes but thanked him to be willing and I acknowledge the bridge from the other side
You didn’t like flying through 150 rings?
Reminds me of this Steve Huges joke
Where’s the source code? Seriously, the only thing I can find for drive & calander are repos that were archived in 2021
So it’s windows emulating linux emulating android emulating linux?
I’m interested to hear how that works out for you
I was too dumb too link it lol
Damn, I thought this was self hosted
For anyone thinking about conducting a similar search for this image.
Turn on safe search before you search “flesh prison”
I’m done internetting for today
I had never heard of radxa. Looks awesome!
Tailscale keeps the private keys locally, . It just facillitates setting up wireguard. They could steal your private keys, as could any program you install with root access. But it would comepletely destroy their business, and it’s open source. I really dont think they have anything to gain by tricking everyone
I’m in the wrong timeline
Anybody else notice the first graph goes from 2020 to 1996?
Was thinking “Oh shit now I have to become vegan”, but the article is paywalled so I didn’t have to go on the guilt trip.
Just to offer the other perspective. I started with podman years ago. I knew very little about containers and I would say it made the learbing curve a lot steeper. Most guides and README’s use docker and when things didnt work I had to figure out if it was networking, selinux, rootless, not having the docker daemon, etc… without understanding fully what those things were because I didn’t know docker. But when I started running stuff on kubernetes, it was really easy. Pods in podman are isomorphic to kubernetes pods. I think the pain was worth it, but it was definitely not easy at the time. Documentation, guides, and networking have improved since then, so it may not be as big of a deal now
Quadlets with podman have completely replaced compose files for me. I use the kuberentes configs. Then I run a tailscale container in the pod and BAM, all of my computers can access that service without have to expose any ports.
Then I have an ansible playbook to log in to the host and start a detached tmux session so my user systemd services keep running. Its all rootless, and just so dang easy.
Not really the same as dropping entirely