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fluppet posted:have a stab at cloudformation/opsworks rather than setting up a single instance Docjowles posted:Also, do poo poo via the API rather than the web console. The point of the cloud is not to spin up special snowflakes slowly one-by-one, so don't treat it that way. There are libraries for basically every language under the sun so you can take your pick. What's a good starting point to do this stuff via python? I've set up a hadoop cluster with Cloudera Manager and 3 datanodes, probably going to do a twitter thing with that
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 19:13 |
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I don't have a particular tutorial in mind, but boto is the go-to Python lib for AWS.
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What's an example of something done Web UI and then the same thing with the API?
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Docjowles posted:I don't have a particular tutorial in mind, but boto is the go-to Python lib for AWS. cool, just installed that
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Friday at 8AM I have a mandatory 2 hour "open house" to celebrate how well we did on a University wide engagement survey and also to discuss ideas on how employees can become more engaged. Nothing says voluntary engagement like a mandatory reception.
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Tab8715 posted:What's an example of something done Web UI and then the same thing with the API? This is pretty much what I'm looking for. It'd be cool write a script that does something - rolling restart servers or something. Not sure really, haven't done much prod work. edit: http://docs.pythonboto.org/en/latest/getting_started.html working through this edit2: worked through the above - getting nerdy excited. Set up buckets / keys .. like I said I haven't done much production work so I don't even know what to really do next. I'd like to focus a cool quick-ish project that I can script in boto Fiendish Dr. Wu fucked around with this message at 21:18 on Feb 10, 2015 |
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What vendors do you folks use for hardware purchases? I've currently got SHI and PC Connections, PC Connections turned around a quote with-in 4 hours, while I'm still waiting for SHI. NewEggBusiness won't answer their phones and I need to hunt down several more quotes for this refresh.
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I've used CDW a bit when our local vendor can't keep up or stay competitive. They've always been decent when I've needed them.
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fromoutofnowhere posted:What vendors do you folks use for hardware purchases? I've currently got SHI and PC Connections, PC Connections turned around a quote with-in 4 hours, while I'm still waiting for SHI. NewEggBusiness won't answer their phones and I need to hunt down several more quotes for this refresh. CDW, Dell, NewEgg, Amazon
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fromoutofnowhere posted:What vendors do you folks use for hardware purchases? I've currently got SHI and PC Connections, PC Connections turned around a quote with-in 4 hours, while I'm still waiting for SHI. NewEggBusiness won't answer their phones and I need to hunt down several more quotes for this refresh.
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vibur posted:I mostly use MicroAge. I love my MicroAge guy. He's my primary VAR, and we have accounts with most of the others. CDW, Zones, PC Mall, Dell, etc. If it's not Dell hardware we order through MicroAge
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It looks like the outage communication pendulum has swung from "faster, more concise information" back over to "more detailed, specific information."
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meanieface posted:What would be the simplest/cheapest way to go about having a box somewhere that I can remote into from work & run a smallish SSMS on? Work only has 2008 and I want to practice on 2014 for the first MS SQL cert. A trial $cloud account on a throw-away email account is free for a month and decent sized players will have a precreated SQL template server so you don't have to bring it yourself or do the install. Anything you're studying in the MCSA will be easily done on a 2-core VM out there, which won't exhaust your trial stipend if you shut it down before you go home.
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skipdogg posted:I love my MicroAge guy. He's my primary VAR, and we have accounts with most of the others. CDW, Zones, PC Mall, Dell, etc. Dell has been getting slower(to ship and build) and more expensive these past few months almost to the point where we are thinking of switching primary desk/lap top vendors.
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When it comes actual end-user equipment like desktops, laptops Lenovo wins. For printers, brother is the best because it seems like the drivers automatically download and just work even from Windows Update. ![]()
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Does Lenovo have an equivalent to Dell gold support? Or is it all mail in service to the depot? NBD onsite techs rule.
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skipdogg posted:Does Lenovo have an equivalent to Dell gold support? Or is it all mail in service to the depot? NBD onsite techs rule. they do nbd onsite but i have had some real poo poo experiences with lenovo support
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I'm kind of skeptical of lenovo. It's probably because mine is a budget one, but my Edge E440 feels fragile as hell. The proper thinkpads are probably much better.
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We're pretty married to Dell at this point. Their Latitude line is still pretty great, universal E-Port docking stations, their gold support is still good, and we do enough volume we get pretty good pricing. HP and Lenovo can't really compare and there are no other options to be honest. It's basically a "pick the least lovely vendor" situation. Dell still wins that.
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Switched from the Dell Optiplex desktops and Latitude laptops to HP EliteDesk and EliteBooks last summer. The price difference was significant cheaper for the HPs, same specs and warranty/onsite repair options. You'd never hear me say this about their consumer line, but I enjoy working with their enterprise hardware. The last two years we got Dell 790s, then 7010s. We've had some high failure rates, maybe around 5 or 10%, mostly bad power supplies. I know I don't have as big of a sample size for the HPs, but I've only had three or four go bad out of an order of 275. Ordering another three hundred of the units this summer, so we'll see if the quality is consistent.
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Things have really gone off the deep end at my client. We're talking the kind of poo poo that makes the front page of the Washington Post. There were failings at every level of management policy wise; what little we could do was rendered mostly useless due to how neutered we are when it comes to proactively blocking malicious traffic. Definitely time to jump ship. Final interview with the VAR that wants to hire me this Thursday. I'd stay with my current company, but they have no openings near me and I'm thinking it's time to get out of ops for a bit. Anyway, as soon as I YOTJ I'm going to tell the poo poo out of this story because it's hilarious.
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well this certainly is entertaining http://forums.somethingawful.com/showthread.php?threadid=3699022
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gently caress Panasonic tough book laptops forever and always.
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evol262 posted:That's ok. It isn't well-spent. These kinds of things have been around forever. Every so often, they get a group which is hired into ${some_hip_company} because they just got a new round of funding and they need to expand so fast that they don't have the time to interview proper candidates, then they hawk it on their website. Honest Thief fucked around with this message at 11:24 on Feb 11, 2015 |
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![]() EDIT: I spoke to the recruiter on the first position, and they got me the PDF copy of the contract to sign with potential for starting on Tuesday if the criminal record check comes back Monday. ![]() Venusy fucked around with this message at 16:09 on Feb 11, 2015 |
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Anyone work for Cisco as a FTE? Looking for impressions of work/life balance, management and peer caliber, job security, etc.
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Venusy posted:
Sounds like a pretty straight forward case of having a bird in the hand. Slightly better pay and slightly better commute alone are not worth burning a bridge at this or really any stage of your career.
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Venusy posted:
It's not really that unusual to have some accept and offer and then turn it down for some reason before they start.
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skipdogg posted:Does Lenovo have an equivalent to Dell gold support? Or is it all mail in service to the depot? NBD onsite techs rule. I think the hardware is a bit nicer but that's more of a personal preference. Seems like we end up depoting and mailing out laptops more than they come to fix them than we did with Dell. That said they've never messed up a repair like some of the Dell techs have.
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CloFan posted:Switched from the Dell Optiplex desktops and Latitude laptops to HP EliteDesk and EliteBooks last summer. The price difference was significant cheaper for the HPs, same specs and warranty/onsite repair options. You'd never hear me say this about their consumer line, but I enjoy working with their enterprise hardware. Just based on them being cheap as gently caress and to keep things standard I order in HP ProDesk 400 G1 SFF desktops, my only gripe is that they come loaded with bloat which I haven't had time to get around. My to-go laptop was the HP ProBook 450 G2 but the price has gone up and at least one has been cracked at the hinge, so I've got one Dell Latitude 3000 series as a trial which I think will be the new standard; since they look pretty tough, are cheaper, and don't have any crap on them (The provider I rarely order from goofed about availability, so gave me an upgrade at no cost as to not disappoint about using Dell, free Hybrid HDD!).
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Dark Helmut posted:Sounds like a pretty straight forward case of having a bird in the hand. Slightly better pay and slightly better commute alone are not worth burning a bridge at this or really any stage of your career. Bob Morales posted:It's not really that unusual to have some accept and offer and then turn it down for some reason before they start. It's not unusual, necessarily, but turning down a solid offer for an interview request stupid, and we all know my stance on continuing to interview once you've accepted an offer (even if they haven't made you a formal offer, once contingent on a background check is the same). Is it worth potentially burning a bridge over this? Honest Thief posted:I know how to code, not great mind you but i get around, although I get stuck in on jobs where I'm doing more maintenance than dev which would imply otherwise. I just figured getting the foothold on the foreign market would be easier through that. Although, after looking around I would have more luck just moving to London and applying to jobs there than spending four to six months. Hey, no, it isn't. Getting a foreign work visa is all about talent and desire. Going to a "code bootcamp" is not more likely to get you offers abroad. And "just moving to London and applying for jobs there" is going to put you in a tricky visa situation. Get good at your job in the US and build some skills people may want abroad, then apply for those jobs or get sponsored by your current employer. Don't go about it backwards because you really want to leave the US. London is expensive. Would you "just move to New York and apply for jobs there"? Or SF? It's the same cost of living. This is a pipe dream.
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Super Slash posted:Just based on them being cheap as gently caress and to keep things standard I order in HP ProDesk 400 G1 SFF desktops, my only gripe is that they come loaded with bloat which I haven't had time to get around. My to-go laptop was the HP ProBook 450 G2 but the price has gone up and at least one has been cracked at the hinge, so I've got one Dell Latitude 3000 series as a trial which I think will be the new standard; since they look pretty tough, are cheaper, and don't have any crap on them (The provider I rarely order from goofed about availability, so gave me an upgrade at no cost as to not disappoint about using Dell, free Hybrid HDD!). We went from HP ProBooks to these Lenovo laptops with quite possibly the worst touchpad in the history of mankind. The entire touchpad is the mouse button, so when you click, the entire touchpad moves, inevitably moving the cursor along with it (generally down since the hinge is up at the top I guess). How anyone thought that would be anything but infuriating, I have no idea. ![]() Just give me two buttons if you can't do pressure sensitivity or something. It's 2015, we've had mice figured out for how many decades now?
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Sheep posted:It's 2015, we've had mice figured out for how many decades now? Apple came out with the touchpad in the unibody MacBook Pro in 2008.
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Touchpads have been available since the 90s. Even 90s Powerbooks had them. Edit: touchpad trackpad they're both mice, point being this poo poo isn't rocket science.
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Sheep posted:We went from HP ProBooks to these Lenovo laptops with quite possibly the worst touchpad in the history of mankind. The entire touchpad is the mouse button, so when you click, the entire touchpad moves, inevitably moving the cursor along with it (generally down since the hinge is up at the top I guess). How anyone thought that would be anything but infuriating, I have no idea. The newer button-trackpads are better and Lenovo added back the physical buttons for the nipple err TrackPoint ![]()
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I think I've used one of those. The thing that actually makes it bad is how far the "button" travels. If it was just a tiny amount like the microswitches on regular mice it wouldn't be a problem, but when it travels something like 5 mm on a rubber dome switch it gets impossible to control.
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Sheep posted:Touchpads have been available since the 90s. Even 90s Powerbooks had them. I'm talking about the first ones that weren't complete rear end.
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Sheep posted:We went from HP ProBooks to these Lenovo laptops with quite possibly the worst touchpad in the history of mankind. The entire touchpad is the mouse button, so when you click, the entire touchpad moves, inevitably moving the cursor along with it (generally down since the hinge is up at the top I guess). How anyone thought that would be anything but infuriating, I have no idea. I have one of these (Thinkpad Yoga) for my work laptop (not my choice) but I certainly can't see how you're having that problem? Maybe if your finger is actually moving when you depress the pad. I have a Macbook Air at home nd don't find switching to the Yoga touchpad an issue at all. I did take some time to configure it for tap to click, two finger (anywhere) right click, two finger scroll etc like I prefer on my MBA, and it's a lot better than most windows touchpads I've used.
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Sheep posted:We went from HP ProBooks to these Lenovo laptops with quite possibly the worst touchpad in the history of mankind. The entire touchpad is the mouse button, so when you click, the entire touchpad moves, inevitably moving the cursor along with it (generally down since the hinge is up at the top I guess). How anyone thought that would be anything but infuriating, I have no idea. I have one of these. Full depress isn't required; soft taps work just fine for left click and two fingers for right click. Stop hulk smashing it and treat it about the same firmness you use a (good, new, clean) cell phone screen. Although I might be the outlier here. I keep my touch screens in pristine condition.
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 19:13 |
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No, I have that exact same issue on my thinkpad. It's very minimal, but if, for example, I'm rapidly clicking on a small button, it will shift enough to make me miss it. Click and dragging is also pretty awful with it. Not unusable, but terrible because they had this poo poo figured out for so long that they really don't have an excuse for shifting to a worse design.
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