Yup, it works great. I actually did it myself when migrating from a centos to debian host. Worked first try, no issues (except one thing that was already broken but I didn’t know because I hadn’t accessed it recently). Containers are great for this.
Yup, it works great. I actually did it myself when migrating from a centos to debian host. Worked first try, no issues (except one thing that was already broken but I didn’t know because I hadn’t accessed it recently). Containers are great for this.
This. Cloud-init, or autoinstall for Ubuntu, to get the install done, then use ansible for anything more.
Bind mounts. I’ve never bothered to figure out named volumes, since I often work with the contents outside Docker. Then I just back up the whole proxmox VM. (Yes I’m aware proxmox supports containers, no I don’t plan to convert, that’s more time and effort for no meaningful gain to me.)
You can restore that backup to a new VM. I just make sure it boots and I can access the files. Turn off networking before you boot it so that it doesn’t cause conflicts.
Apparently I can’t read
Loops?
“They’re too big to fail, they’re the only major domestic aircraft manufacturer!” Ok so nationalize them
It’s more powerful than the one in Windows and faster than installing a third-party one. Also it does unit conversions.
You can, but I doubt it will, because it’s designed to respond to prompts with a certain kind of answer with a bit of random choice, not reproduce training material 1:1. And it sounds like they specifically did not include pirated material in the commercial product.
The order seems to say that the trained LLM and the commercial Claude product are not linked, which supports the decision. But I’m not sure how he came to that conclusion. I’m going to have to read the full order when I have time.
This might be appealed, but I doubt it’ll be taken up by SCOTUS until there are conflicting federal court rulings.
On Lenovo it’s usually the delete key, I think. You should check the manual. It should also be an entry in the boot options list.
You might also try a reset, but it would also be helpful if you shared the “few rolling lines of text”.
How little ram and swap do you have that this is a problem?
You might just use ulimit: https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/746762/90708
I feel like there’s a better way to do this, unless you’re intentionally trying to run out of RAM.
Yeah but I googled it after making that comment, and it was sometimes less than one second before impact: https://futurism.com/tesla-nhtsa-autopilot-report
In the report, the NHTSA spotlights 16 separate crashes, each involving a Tesla vehicle plowing into stopped first responders and highway maintenance vehicles. In the crashes, it claims, records show that the self-driving feature had “aborted vehicle control less than one second prior to the first impact”
I’ve heard they also like to disengage self-driving mode right before a collision.
That’s cracking, not hacking. If you’re going to be pedantic, be correct.
https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs/ch03s18.html
Don’t put important stuff in /tmp. Put it in /opt or something.
Yeah. For a small shop, it won’t help. Just show up and be willing to work and learn. Save that money.
Why GitHub? The installers are literally on the Thunderbird site https://www.thunderbird.net/
Thunderbird runs on Windows.
I just did that on my own laptop, trying to figure out why it was running like crap. Turns out I set it to quiet mode instead of cool, so it underclocked instead of running the fan