- I have device protection through Google Fi and a phone which is under warranty.
- The Pixel 5a I have is from a subscription through Google Fi.
- The phone is only 9 months old.
- The phone has repeatedly turned off on its own (crash) since the first few weeks, but the hassle of getting a new one prevented me from doing anything about it. I guess I should be less lazy. It has always turned back on.
- The phone was slow and acted buggy at times. Reboots sometimes fixed it, but sometimes not. I chalked this up to the Android Operating System being bad, but looking back I now realize it was probably hardware.
- I have been using Google software for 20+ years, Google, Gmail, Maps, Chrome, Drive, Photos, Google+, Youtube, etc. a. I pay for youtube premium and google one.
- Amex Card:
^3[47][0-9]{13}$
- BCGlobal:
^(6541|6556)[0-9]{12}$
- Carte Blanche Card:
^389[0-9]{11}$
- Diners Club Card:
^3(?:0[0-5]|[68][0-9])[0-9]{11}$
- Discover Card:
^65[4-9][0-9]{13}|64[4-9][0-9]{13}|6011[0-9]{12}|(622(?:12[6-9]|1[3-9][0-9]|[2-8][0-9][0-9]|9[01][0-9]|92[0-5])[0-9]{10})$
- Insta Payment Card:
^63[7-9][0-9]{13}$
- JCB Card:
^(?:2131|1800|35\d{3})\d{11}$
- KoreanLocalCard:
^9[0-9]{15}$
- Run MySQL via Docker:
docker run -p 3306:3306 --name kelnerhax-mysql -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=<password> -d mysql:latest
docker inspect <container-name>
to get the container ip from `NetworkSettings.IPAddress"docker exec -it <container-name> /bin/bash
to get on the docker container- Follow https://docs.datadoghq.com/integrations/mysql/#prepare-mysql
mysql -u root --password=<password>
Near the office: | |
http://www.bonesrestaurant.com/ $$$$ | |
http://www.kinganddukeatl.com/ $$ | |
http://www.thesoutherngentlemanatl.com/ $$ | |
Venturing a bit further away from the office: | |
http://capedutchrestaurant.com/ $$ | |
https://www.holeman-finch.com/ $$ | |
And even further away: |
Original document can be found here; written by Mike Schuette.
This document provides a rapid-fire overview of Kubernetes concepts, vocabulary, and operations. The target audience is anyone who runs applications in a cloud environment today, and who wants to understand the basic mechanics of a Kubernetes cluster. The goal is that within 10 minutes, managers who read this should be able to listen in on a Kubernetes conversation and follow along at a high level, and engineers should be ready to deploy a sample app to a toy cluster of their own.
This orientation doc was written because the official Kubernetes docs are a great reference, but they present a small cliff to climb for newcomers.
If you want to understand why you should consider running Kubernetes, see the official Kubernetes conceptual overview document. This doc
This doc explains the nuances of using the Datadog Ansible Integration with Ansible Tower.
In a directory of your choosing, run the following commands:
vagrant init ansible/tower
vagrant up --provider virtualbox
vagrant ssh
Queries a Github Api rate_limit to find out how close you are to hitting your rate limit. Great for build servers when your not sure why something broke.
Use to create graphs like: or you can display multiple values on a single graph:
Plugins come with a YAML file and a python file. The YAML file is the
- ams01 : Amsterdam 1
- ams03 : Amsterdam 3
- che01 : Chennai 1
- dal01 : Dallas 1
- dal10 : Dallas 10
- dal12 : Dallas 12
- dal02 : Dallas 2
- dal05 : Dallas 5
- dal06 : Dallas 6
- dal07 : Dallas 7
:..............:.......: | |
: datacenter : value : | |
:..............:.......: | |
: Amsterdam 1 : ams01 : | |
: Amsterdam 3 : ams03 : | |
: Chennai 1 : che01 : | |
: Dallas 1 : dal01 : | |
: Dallas 2 : dal02 : | |
: Dallas 6 : dal06 : | |
: Dallas 9 : dal09 : |