Most of the frameworks I've looked into fall into one of two categories: 1. Tries to do ALL THE THINGS - does none of them particularly well, usually has a huge memory footprint 2. Agile development cycle with nearly nightly builds, so frequent that I have no idea how you could ever build a production system from it - everything's in constant flux, features add/change/removed regularly, compatibility issues, etc, etc
Hey you know how we're always complaining about devs trying to do our job, and using their tools to do it badly? Take a look at a line of code I'm putting into a program I'm developing for my operations: ssh root@$nas lun show| awk '{print $1}'| sed 's/\(\/vol\/\)\(.*\/\)\(.*\)/\1\2/g'
the length of the unreadable alphabet soup after that pipe to sed is longer than the actual command
Maintainable code? This bad boy is self-documenting.
@cole Tell me about it. I got like 17 minutes of sleep last night. With my already-low motivation, it was an epic battle to crawl out of bed and come into work 2 hours late.
@HopelessN00b I'm leaving at 3 today to go to the Harpoon Brewery for a vendor thing (hooray free beer) and tomorrow starts my vaca - so I have a severe case of the fuckits
@Basil Perl-compatible regex, Extended regex (POSIX). What you're using is a BRE, basic regex (POSIX). sed defaults to BRE, takes the -e flag for ERE and GNU sed takes -p for PCRE
The cassowaries (IPA: /,kæsɵwæri/) are ratites (flightless birds without a keel on their sternum bone) in the genus Casuarius native to the tropical forests of New Guinea, nearby islands, and northeastern Australia. There are three extant species recognized today. The most common of these, the southern cassowary, is the third tallest and second heaviest living bird, smaller only than the ostrich and emu.
Cassowaries feed mainly on fruit, although all species are truly omnivorous and will take a range of other plant food including shoots, grass seeds, and fungi in addition to invertebrat...
> This bird is considered to be the most dangerous bird in the world, with a criminal record deserving (in the human kingdom anyway) of outright capital punishment. Common to New Guinea (do not go there for the birds!), this bird has a 5 inch-long dagger-like claw attached to its second claw that can kill a man (and has before!). Their legs are ridiculously powerful, can kick humans (and dogs) with violent force, and can run at speeds up to 31 MPH.
The Emu War, also known as the Great Emu War, was a nuisance wildlife management operation undertaken in Australia over the latter part of 1932 to address public concern over the number of emus said to be running amok in the Campion district of Western Australia. The attempts to curb the population of emus, a large flightless bird indigenous to Australia, employed soldiers armed with machine guns—leading the media to adopt the name "Emu War" when referring to the incident.
Background
Following World War I, large numbers of ex-soldiers from Australia, along with a number of British vet...
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@ewwhite explain what services will be effected should the server fail (if you haven't already), ~how much that would cost the company if you have that info (if you haven't already, and I know you probably have), then wash your hands with it.
as long as you have a solid-proof contract and that you can prove that you've warned them multiple times with the possibility of a meltdown.. I'm not sure what else you can do
dropping them would only leave you with less money
@ewwhite Yeah, in that circumstance I'd be a bit insistent too. Just be aware that they know the risk to their business, and if they accept it...then sit back, relax and watch the fireworks.
@BigHomie "According to the criminal complaint, one of the girls told police they were trying to prove that the Slender Man, a fictitious Internet character, was real, according to local media reports. The idea allegedly was to kill as the Slender Man to prove his existence."
@MichaelHampton @ewwhite At some point you have to step back and say "I tried to help them, they didn't want my help. I'm not going to take it personally and I'm going to move on."
@ewwhite he means "whatever happens happens". This might involve dude coming to his senses, or the head honcho coming back and ripping him a new one then ordering the equipment, or yeah, them failing.
Send a certified letter saying "I advise you thusly, if you don't take the following actions these could be the results." If nothing else, the fact that it's certified may make him sit up and take notice. "Huh? Why is @ewwhite sending me a tracked document… oh shit…"
@MichaelHampton then green light the hardware changes and let me deal with it
I'm not asking for a discussion about what I quoted... I gave them $100k in quotes, breaking it down into projects and what needed to be done in which order, with which dependencies.
@ewwhite You don't want to give up on them. In that case, forget what we're saying and go harder. See him in person, schedule multiple meetings to discuss this. Remind him time and time again what will happen should this not get done, in terms of dollars and cents, that's the common language.
@BigHomie I went to the site to try to meet him in person... he refused to meet
But other employees told me about what was happening in the firm.
lots of growth, new warehouses... I was dealing with cabling contractors, new wireless AP installs, etc... but piecemeal, without seeing the bigger picture
So, I'd say it's not unethical if it comes w/out warning. Your service is no different than gas and water, what happens if you are past due $6k on those?
I'm not a d**k, and wouldn't want to be one w/ customers, but I guess they have to know where you stand. Hope I don't have to take my own advice one day lol.
@Soviero certain tillers aren't made for roots. The ones that are are far too expensive to rent for 1 inch roots. Go out there on a good day and put some man strength in it. Also, I onebox'd a pick mattock, not a pickaxe, and when I said axe I was referring to a traditional axe.
@Soviero certain tillers meaning the smaller ones, trust me, they'll just bounce off the roots and wear you out even more. they can barely crack hard soil, let alone roots.
@Soviero I've been there. First rule, tools are king. Buy the right tool for the right job. In your case, I'd start with a cheap pair of gloves and an axe. That's all I have to say about that.