• 0 Posts
  • 516 Comments
Joined 10 months ago
cake
Cake day: August 18th, 2023

help-circle
rss
  • NaNtoLinux@lemmy.mlLinux in the military
    link
    fedilink
    English
    17 hours ago

    For stuff that is still maintained but also legacy, military and contracting benefit from being a pretty insular community. Contractors are full of military retirees. What this does is give a pool of people who worked with the products for a very long time on one side who move over into maintaining them on the other, less knowledge is lost. It still happens and things must change eventually, but they manage to delay things where someone else like a bank might have a harder time when their knowledgeable employee leaves and they’re hiring people off the street.


  • NaNtoLinux@lemmy.mlLinux in the military
    link
    fedilink
    English
    78 hours ago

    Red Hat has long benefitted from being the primary enterprise Linux company based in the US (no, we don’t count Oracle). SUSE created US-based Rancher Government Solutions to get some of that business and it seems to have been getting a lot of interest, despite being early days. They did a good job of focusing on modern technologies and immutable systems.
















  • Even if they do question, it’s not like they are in a safe environment to do so openly. They have to be prepared to give up community, friends, family, potentially their physical safety, and a worldview that says exactly who to be and how to live to be living a good life. That’s a huge step.

    I know for a fact there are religious people going through the motions because the alternative is too frightening, just like people stay in bad marriages.




  • NaNtoLinux@lemmy.ml“Systemd is the future”
    link
    fedilink
    English
    8
    edit-2
    8 days ago

    I thought surely some distribution had messed up by using this temporary files generator for /home, but that configuration is actually a file bundled with systemd and the purge would take effect even if the distribution was creating /home as part of the install (ignoring the tmpfiles config), which they pretty much all do. So yeah, any defense I had towards the dev is gone there.