@muru stay out of their way and dont touch the kittens
find a nice dark spot somewhere they can access and put some towels on the floor. she'll move her kittens somewhere warm and out of the way (in my experience) when shes ready
Hey everyone! Quick question: I had been studying for a certification, and having chosen CentOS as my distribution, the version that would be used in the test would be 6.4. I had to suspend my studying for a while, but now I wanted to pick it back up. It was recently announced that I can use either CentOS 6 or CentOS 7 — as I'm going to pick it back up, I'll essentially be starting from scratch, sooo.... Are there any reasons in particular why I should stick to 6 or change to 7?
(I asked this here since it does not seem like a good fit for the site, probably primarily opinion based)
@JNat I doubt it but I don't really do CentOS. As a general rule, the basics don't change. I doubt there will be any real differences. You should ask @slm when he's online though. He's our resident CentOS/Red Hat guy.
@terdon i think it will eventually become the standard on linux, so it is definitely worth learning. Aside from the vitriolic rhetoric surround it, from a user perspective not much actually changes and in my limited experience writing a systemd unit vs an init script, I'm happy with the systemd unit
I am looking for a cheap wireless usb dongle. I do not need 802.11n, but do need 802.11a, b, and g. Would like one that has kernel support and works out of the box.
@Seth I never really used IRC in the past. When I started playing around in Linux (a year ago or a bit more) I started using it here and there, but it never stuck to me, so I always end up forgetting about it.
@JNat It's used quite extensively in the FOSS community. Matter of fact freenode is almost entirely dedicated to FOSS/OSS projects. I never used it, or even heard of it either until I started using Linux either :p