They still haven't fixed the major bugs after how many years in the first game. I don't think I can trust them with a second.
Shirasho
They were expecting a 2 billion dollar deal with the Saudis, but that fell through.
Well, yes. The heroes are generally the average people who don't do stuff for attention. The "pretty" ones who dress themselves up and try to get media attention are generally the villains.
Oh look, another social engineering scam passing itself off as a meme.
I hate to be that guy, but this is exactly how people crack into your accounts. These scams are aimed at getting information that can be used to crack security questions for account recovery.
Please do yourself a favor. Next time you see these images please do not interact with them.
As you said, I am perfectly aware that in an ideal world security would be on lockdown. How it behaves on Linux is how it SHOULD work. That doesn't change the main point that you can't hit the ground running with Docker containers in Linux.
Playing Final Fantasy XIII. That legitimately made me cry with how frustrating that game was to play.
Don't get me wrong - I know that they are, and I know that Linux is superior for running docker containers. The thing is that Windows handles all the permissions for you. An average Joe can get a docker container up and running on Windows. You need significantly more Linux-specific knowledge to get a container running on Linux, and the advice given by the community is often cryptic for beginners.
IIS is not the same as Docker. Sounds to me you are shitting on IIS for the sake of trying to prove a point I wasn't trying to make.
This goes into my next point. Linux users are toxic as hell. They are elitist snobs who shit on newbies because they have years of experience.
I can run a Linux docker container on Windows and it just works. When I run it on Linux it is constant permission and access issues.
Hit the ground running deploying...pretty much anything.
Was running game servers on my Windows PC through Docker and they were super easy to set up. I got a new PC and decided to repurpose my old computer into an Ubuntu server to get some experience with Unix. I have only been more frustrated once in my entire life. Sure, once things are set up on Linux they are really powerful, but the barrier to entry is so absurdly high and running anything "out of the box" is literally impossible by design.
I wish they would pull out of the American market because they are by far the worst chip we have. Overly greasy, no character, and just as expensive as premium chips.
Probably has something to do with religious freedoms.