catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,767
Entirely possible.Or she knew how things worked there and left it for you!
Entirely possible.Or she knew how things worked there and left it for you!
Solaris on SPARC was a wonderful Unix flavour.More fun from my day:
I don't know if I should be impressed with this little computer that could or appalled.
The system is an 11 year old Sun T5120 (well past retirement age for this hardware!) with 32gb of RAM with just ~570mb free:
RAM Total 32544.0 Mb
RAM Unusable 726.6 Mb
RAM Kernel 7141.2 Mb
RAM Locked 21481.9 Mb
RAM Used 2614.6 Mb
RAM Avail 579.7 Mb
It appears to have 14 database instances running on it and hasn’t been rebooted in 1668 days (4.5 years).
Then, as I was marvelling at that one, I found another with 6.8 years of uptime.
SunOS xxxxxxxx 5.10 Generic_147440-23 sun4v sparc SUNW,Sun-Fire-T200
$ w
9:50am up 2513 day(s), 1 min(s), 1 user, load average: 4.03, 4.46, 4.94
User tty login@ idle JCPU PCPU what
xxxxxxxx pts/12 9:49am w
Wow. Just wow.
Please do me the courtesy of assuming I'm well aware of these arguments, and have made my own choices about how to respond to the situation. I've seen your rant before. Hell, I've ranted your rant before. I don't mind if you dissent, but don't think you're telling me anything I haven't already considered.
My experience is I very rarely can't find results with DDG, but the technical stuff I look for is computer related and they do well on that. They may well be less useful in other broad subject areas.Yeah well... I tried DuckDuckGo and some others I forgot the name of. Common for them all was that especially for technical stuff they sucked. Big time. So.. As long as Google does the trick better, Google it is.
A lot more comfortable now than I used to be. My point is that I get where you're coming from, because I used to be there myself. I'm not there still, obviously.You claim to have made the same rant yourself, yet you used the word "google" as a verb (instead of a more generic "search") eight times in the text I quoted. it seems like you're very comfortable with using their services.
Solaris on SPARC was a wonderful Unix flavour.
Things I wish more people knew, part MCMLXXVICBNDP:
Your password will expire 3 months (or however long it is) to the minute after you last changed it. If you changed it at 09:50 last time, it will expire at 09:50 this time. If you are logged on at that time, you'll suddenly start losing access to things.
Change your password no less than a full day before it says it's going to need to be changed.
I suspect that you're fighting a losing battle there.
Gah! I hate Google! I detest their deep tendrils in the web, their omnipresent code snippets in damned near every page I visit, and their creepy tendency to grab as much information about me and my browsing habits as they can get their filthy hands on. I despise the fact that in order to use a lot of sites I have to solve an idiot Google ReCaptcha, which drive me nuts and which binds me to their Terms of Service in addition to the site's.
Google is an advertising and privacy sucking company first and a search provider second. To a huge degree the omnipresent advertising and tracking that's made the modern web damned near unusable can be traced back to Google and their business practices.
And I really hate it when people use the word "google" as a verb to mean a "web search." Not that it's unprecedented; several common words in English originated as corporate trademarks. But to see people, especially computer techs, casually using it to mean "searching" makes me cringe, almost as if they were talking about "*******" when they mean "black people."
Here's a fun fact: I have never forgotten a work password. In my thirty years in the computer-enabled workforce I have never needed to have a password reset. Not even once. And I don't use crap passwords, either. I used to, but not for about twenty years.Ours start to nag when your password has 10 days left. Through experience I've found it's best to wait until Mondays to change it, I have had to change on a Thursday and managed to forgot it over the weekend![]()
Here's a fun fact: I have never forgotten a work password. In my thirty years in the computer-enabled workforce I have never needed to have a password reset. Not even once. And I don't use crap passwords, either. I used to, but not for about twenty years.
I think there's a reference there that I'm not getting.Have you checked the basement for pods?
I suspect that you're fighting a losing battle there.
My experience is I very rarely can't find results with DDG, but the technical stuff I look for is computer related and they do well on that. They may well be less useful in other broad subject areas.
In fact, a couple of times in the last few months I've unblocked Google from my /etc/hosts file so I could search for something there and was astonished at how poor results were. It was almost like "we think you're actually looking for <something slightly different> so we'll give you those results instead."
Indeed it was (and is) excellent. Stable, efficient and powerful. I still have a couple of SPARCs in storage.That is the only unix box I ever touched. It was a magic machine at the time and it had its own room and its own minder. I had to schedule time on the machine or Humingbird in remotely from my PC (which was less magical) but oh I loved that beast.
A quick comparison I just made using some of the things I typed into Google the past week shows that DuckDuckGo has an overwhelming bias towards StackOverflow. First batch of results is almost exclusively SO. Google has SO links on the first page but also several blogs and relevant MSDN links.
Ours start to nag when your password has 10 days left. Through experience I've found it's best to wait until Mondays to change it, I have had to change on a Thursday and managed to forgot it over the weekend![]()
The reason Google's results are better than DuckDuckGo's is that Google knows you and knows what you're looking for.Admittedly it's been a while since I tried DuckDuckGo. They absolutely horrificly sucked at the time. They might have gotten better. I wouldn't know.
A quick comparison I just made using some of the things I typed into Google the past week shows that DuckDuckGo has an overwhelming bias towards StackOverflow. First batch of results is almost exclusively SO. Google has SO links on the first page but also several blogs and relevant MSDN links.
I like SO. But not like DuckDuckGo likes SO.
I'll stick with Google.
ETA: Sorry for derail. Now back to the regular scheduled IT support venting..![]()
At my last two workplaces, despite some arbitrary restrictions on password characters, I was able to use the same password (a reasonably secure one) and just change the digit at the end each time I was required to choose a new one. I have never divulged a personal password, despite the IT department routinely asking for it if they ever had to work on my laptop (which was against the published security guidelines).
The reason Google's results are better than DuckDuckGo's is that Google knows you and knows what you're looking for.
