From 0c62c4c8017ceed2b6d74911dda802b24acc56ab Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?Bankn8II=C2=A9=24A?= <102619282+barionleg@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Mon, 2 Dec 2024 10:32:54 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Update index.html --- index.html | 78 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++--------------------------- 1 file changed, 39 insertions(+), 39 deletions(-) diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index ba5c1609..729590b3 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -53,20 +53,20 @@
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+ @@ -146,12 +146,12 @@Recently I was playing Transport Fever. If you’re unaware of this epic, nerd, god game and you like those types of games, you should definitely check it out. If you’re not into those, just suffice it to say that there is a lot of mouse clicking in the game. During the last few weeks when I startup the game and navigate about building my railroad empire a certain someone else noticed that the mouse clicking increases exponentially.
I thought to myself, “we need a solution to this!” I began searching for a silent mouse, first using a little Google-fu, but also a quick query on Twitter among the Twitterverse. Quickly a result came back that looked like it would work out in Logitech’s M331 Silent Mouse product.
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+I’ve been practicing up on some algorithms with Go per my Resolutions for 2018 item “Write More Code, Build Patterns, Algorithms”. Here’s a few of the ones I took a quick review of, from the algorithm perspective.
The first algorithm I took a dive into is a big sum problem. Part of the reason is I wanted a refresher on how Go deals with various integer data types. Easier to set it to memory if I play around with the data types versus just simply reading up on the specifics.
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+I need a tool just to do some testing against an API end point. I figured I’d throw one together real quick in Go. With a few libraries it’s just a few steps to get the job done. The following is that project. Eventually I’ll create the services that will run in some containers I’ll throw into a Kubernetes cluster, but for now, it’s all CLI. Onward.
The first thing I’ll need is Cobra.
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+Kelsey Hightower, Chen Goldberg, and Anthony Yeh
Day two kicked off (read on for day one wrap up) with Kelsey Hightower, Chen Goldberg, and Anthony Yeh. The big push from Kelsey and team focused their keynote around the development story around Kubernetes. Specifically, that a developers and apps users, should never need to know they’re using Kubernetes. He, Chen, and Anthony all talked about the idea we developers - as I’ll offer is true - want to work within our workflow committing, tagging, and knowing our applications will appear in test, development, QA, UAT, and production as we work.
- +Next Clayton Coleman from Red Hat came up to talk about “Boring is Good”. I found Clayton’s quote “Red Hat helsp build boring software” to be well stated and also an apt description of how Red Hat succeeds today. Red Hat currently, boringly, runs some of the largest Kubernetes clusters. They use Prometheus to gain observability into those clusters and work dilligently to improve Kubernetes.
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+I hope you’re having a good morning so far. KubeCon has kicked off in full force like the pro-conference that it is. With 4k+ people in attendance the crowds are distinctive, even among a city like Austin. The conference lit off the day with an absurdly early registration time of 7am, and a continental breakfast of some fruit and pastries.
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+@@ -253,7 +253,7 @@It appears @AlaskaAir could have just dubbed the nonstop to Austin the #KubeCon Express flight! pic.twitter.com/xui3t4VB1i
— Λdrøn @ ¯_(ツ)_/¯ (@Adron) December 5, 2017
I’m on another plane departing Seattle via SEATAC (SEA). An Alaska Air Boeing 737-900 to be specific. The flight is currently en route to Austin, Texas and the vast majority of people aboard are going to KubeCon. The seats, as they always are, aren’t built for any mortal, normal, reasonably sized human being. So we’re all cuddled up annoyingly but making the best of it we can. Seriously though, I’d rather be on an overnight train. I’d rather spend another 24+ or more hours comfortably studying some Netflix infrastructer and chilling out instead of flying, but that isn’t really an option in this giant country, so onward I go as the dream of comfort in transportation eludes me.
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+I opened up Visual Studio Code today with an intent to use it for all my editing, documenting, and coding today. My priorities today, on a day I’ve taken off from work, is to work on my upcoming Terraform Course, a little Go coding, and also a few general tasks and notes. While I work on these priorities, you dear reader, get the benefit of my random notes. ;)
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