Infrastructure nerd, gamer, and Lemmy.ca maintainer
That’s correct. You’re telling docker to bind to that specific network interface. The default is 0.0.0.0 which listens on all interfaces.
Very safe unless you attach razor blades to the blades.
Most small DC motors don’t have enough power to break the skin
It’s not as big a risk as this person is making out. If you’re playing with low current microcontroller stuff, there’s virtually no risk. At most you’re gonna let the magic smoke out of a chip, not start a fire.
If you start getting into stepper motors and things like that, sure, but that’s a long ways from where you are today.
Find a project and make it. Maybe something off adafruit? https://learn.adafruit.com/
Pick up a pinecil for your first soldering iron.
Nothing else that immediately comes to mind, it was like 20 years ago.
Two big ones in my younger days:
Alt tabbed one too many times, clicked drop database, clicked ok, realized I’d just deleted the live user database for America’s Army. Thankfully it was the east coast site and west coast was the primary, and it was only one way replication. We shut down east coast auth and rebuilt the secondary.
Someone distracted me while typing in a vlan command on a switch, I hit enter without double checking, took out our fiber between two datacenters in the middle of a move. Took me 15 minutes to run to the DC, plug in a console cable and fix it. Took all of our customers out.
They used to be expertsexchange.com but renamed to experts-exchange.com for that reason 😂
Look at workstation cards. Things like the T1000 for example.
Expertsexchange, Stack overflow
Your mouse movement on that page is. Just like if you typed into the page.
It’s not tracking you in other windows and apps.
Someone hasn’t learned to block themselves out a lunch hour.
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity
Had a zfs array on an adaptec raid card. On reboot the partition table would get trashed and block the zfs pool from coming up, but running fdisk against the disk would recover it from the backup.
Had a script to run on reboot that just ran “fdisk -l” on every disk, then brought up the zfs pool. Worked great for years until I finally did a kernel upgrade that resolved it.
I don’t see why not. Each one has a unique serial number, and they would track which ones went to which stores.
I doubt it’s worth the hassle if they stole a few tickets, but if there was a major theft or a murder then definitely.
Either my brothers intellivision, or SimCity in black and white on an old Mac classic.
I’d believe it. I’ve had hundreds of Linux servers that don’t have any desktop Gui at all deployed on them.
Linux desktop users make up an absolutely tiny fraction of Linux installs.
“it takes two”