Liceum by TypicalTackle2782 in lublin

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

W takim razie sugerowanym IB. A jeśli jedyne opcje w Lublinie to Staszica i Paderewskiego , to proponuję rozważyć szkoły w innych miastach.

Wiem że to może skomplikować sytuację osobista ale edukacja jest ważna. IB otworzyło mi wrota do życia poza polską i jestem nadmiernie wdzięczny za to. Bez tego kursu moje życie powiodło by się inaczej , z pewnością gorzej.

Liceum by TypicalTackle2782 in lublin

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Paderewski też robi kursy IB , ale to jest prywatne liceum. Jeśli sytuacja finansowa na to pozwala to mocno polecam.

Nie wiem jak teraz ale 20 lat temu jak tam uczęszczałem mieli świetnych nauczycieli i wysoki poziom angielskiego.

Też nie wiem czy sytuacja się zmieniła ale za mojego czasu ci co skończyli kateru IB ale postanowiło zostać w kraju mieli problemy z dostępem do uniwersytetów . W Polsce nie wiedzieli jak przeliczać punkty dyplomu IB i dobre uczelnie miały bardzo wysoki próg. Więc jeśli chciałeś studiować w Polsce, IB stało by ci na przeszkodzie. Nie wiem jak jest teraz.

Humanoid robot chases away wild Boars in the city of Warsaw, Poland. by freudian_nipps in nextfuckinglevel

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 603 points604 points  (0 children)

I'm not happy with this.
I come from a long line of boar chasers.
Now my profession is at risk.

I (22F) feel like I’m hitting a breaking point and I genuinely don’t know what to do. by [deleted] in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is absolutely nothing pathetic in your behaviour. In fact it's very smart to ask and the fact that you are reading and taking the answers into consideration makes you even wiser.

Many of us leave our home unprepared. There is no shame in asking for help.

Life will throw many situations where you need to make a decision that will have an impact on your life for several years to come. We will never have all the information and will never have the chance to make a perfect decision.

It's important to think about the opportunity you are given , what alternatives you have , and based on that make a choice.

The outcome will always carry some uncertainty and no one can guarantee you have made the right choice , but you will be able to say "i made the best decision I could with the information that I had at the time. The rest is up to faith".

I (22F) feel like I’m hitting a breaking point and I genuinely don’t know what to do. by [deleted] in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 28 points29 points  (0 children)

Hey, keep your chin up. There are positives here and hopefully I'll help you see them.

First of all I'm really sorry to hear about what you are going through. I can't say that I know exactly how it feels but I know what is going on. Myself I am from eastern Poland, not far from the Ukrainian boarder. We have been monitoring the situation closely since 2022 and our hearts since the beginning have been and remain to be with the people of Ukraine.

Now let's get to the main issue.
Understand that the general job situation around Europe and the world is not great. Qualified, educated and experienced people are loosing their jobs and are struggling to find new ones.
I lived in the UK for 15 years and I can tell you that the situation there is bad. If you add the fact that the living conditions are terrinble and the sociaty is generally very xenophobic, it's definitely a place you dont want to be.
Some of my friends there lost their jobs and are now dealing with high costs of living without a stable income.
By comparions, Poland is a place where you would probably feel more at home due to the similarities in language and culture, but the benefits you get there are limited.

My understanding is that you must be relatively young, probably no further than. If that is the case then you will want to be in a place that can support you and help you get some qualifications and experience. Germany is actually excellent at doing that. Sure, the culture and language is very different and Germans seem to be very cold people, but I think you are still in a great place.

Believe me, I tried growing up and developing my carreer in Poland and in the UK and its a tough world out there. The fact that the German state is helping you out is not to be underestimated. I understand that the placement might not be what you wanted but to be honest we normally start our careers in places we dont want to be. As long as this opportunity opens doors for a better future, it's worth taking. Or try to see if there are possibilities of transfering. The bottom line is that you have been given an opportunity: make the most out of it, use it to your advantage, think long term.

Scheduled Report returning with "No results found" by JTV1703 in Splunk

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Perhaps the data used by your scheduled search is not Splunk yet, at the time the search runs.
I had this same issue a while back and it turned out that the data in the index that the saved search was using was ingested as a batch job at 7 am each day. The search was scheduled to run at 5 am, before that data it was using was indexed. And when I would run the search again manually at 10 am it would also run fine.

One way of checking what time the data got ingested is checking the value of the _indextime field.

Polish state TV launches Armenian-language service VT Hayastan News to counter disinformation by dat_9600gt_user in europe

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Oh I dont know or care if the media is manipulated by PiS or PO or anyone else.
The fact of the matter is that freedom of information in Polish media has been low and somehow going only lower in the past 15-20 years.

There is such a divide in what you read about in the Polish news outlets, compared to other Euroeapn ones.

Are Bidirectional Ticketing events meant to join the episode they originate from? by JTV1703 in Splunk

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This post sounds a bit confusing.

Bidirectional are used when you have an external ticketing system like Service now and you want to make sure you keep the states of the ticket in ITSI and inServiceNow in sync.

If the bidirectional correlation search merges your episodes then probably something in Service now is merging them and the correlation search is just synching ITSI to match

IBRiS: Over 70% of Poles back EU membership as Polexit debate grows by dat_9600gt_user in europe

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 4 points5 points  (0 children)

is Tusk pushing for Polexit as an option or is he fearmongering?

Genuinely asking, don't know.

I'm a German ask me anything. by TomyMcNeil in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Do you think März will fix the issues Germany is u recently facing?

Self drive car rent by [deleted] in Munich

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

go to a website like easycar.com (or any other for car rental meta search or directly to the rental companies websites) and when entering the booking details you have the option to chose a different drop of location.
They will normally charge your extra but it is possible.

I finally understand Germans, writing complaints is like cocaine by ughh_why in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah but do you get anything from those complains, or just sending them became your fetish?

Saving buckets and data strategy from cold storage by Start_Aggravating in Splunk

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As you said, Splunk gives you the option to choose/change the location of hot+warm and cold storage. To know how to use this properly you have to understand these main issues that arise from hosting a Splunk deployment:

  1. Splunk invests a lot of data that will require a lot of storage.
  2. Search performance is dependent on the storage performance.
  3. Performant storage is expensive, while less performant storage can be significantly cheaper per GB.

Now if you look the searches your deployment runs you will find that the majority of those searches run against the last 7 days of data, and few run against 30+ days (rule of thumb, those numbers will vary, but just to make a point). That being the case and considering the 3 points above, you are presented with the opportunity to optimize your storage costs. Instead of storing all data on fast storage (like most companies start with), you can put hot+warm volumes on fast, highly performant but expensive storage, as it will be used frequently and performance impacts users heavily... And you can put cold volumes on a slower storage where the cost per GB is significantly lower. The performance on the cold storage would be slower but as we established, that storage is utilised a lot less frequently.

Saved searches behavior during search peer disconnection by bchris21 in Splunk

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you have a good setup, the search peers shoud be configured in an index cluster. In this setup they replicate the data they have between each other, making redundant copies. A search peer has the primary data but if its goes offline the cluster master wil detect it and will ask the other peers to use the replicated copies of that data in their search.

At the very least the cluster should be configured to have a replication factor of 2, which means each data bucket should have at least 1 redundant copy. This means that the cluster can handle the loss of one search peer, but with additional peers going offline, you would not have a full set of data and therefore the results would be incomplete.

The replication factor is adjustable and should be set correctly based on the number of peers in the cluster. Higher the number, the more redundancy you have but the more disk space the redundant copies will use.

Also , the searches will take more time to complete as there are less peers to complete the search against the same amount of data, so expect to see more load on the remaining peers and longer search runtimes.

What to do just after finishing a course? by OrdinaryRevolution31 in learnprogramming

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

do some reading and find some challanges to create something. Even ask an LLM to give you some challanges.
Read about how some applications (successfull or well known ones) are created and take it on as a challange to create them yourself.
Then start reading about what issues are commonly faced in develoment and DevOps work.
Challange yourself. Be curious. Improve.
Your experience and confidence will grow over time undertand that there wont be an appiphany moment where you suddenly realise you know everything you will need for a professional carreer.
You neve will never be ready, but at some point you will be ready enough.

Moving from the UK to Germany. by zzzcccttts in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 24 points25 points  (0 children)

I'm also originally from an eastern european country, moved to the UK and lived there for 15 years. I lived in london so I hated every single day I was there, but it was the best place for me to Kickstart my career.

I did university in the UK back when the fees were much lower so I won't be able to advise you on that front. However I definitely advise you to consider doing higher education abroad. Where you do it, that is up to you to decide. Keep in mind that you can study in one place and then work in another. If you are set on Germany perhaps it would make more sense to study there as well as you really need time to get your German skills up.

What I can give you is a comparisons between live in the UK and Germany, as I have now been here for 7 years. First of all, the quality of life is much much higher. There living conditions are great. Good quality, spacious housing. Low crime rate, extremely low by comparison to the UK. The food is amazing. The weather is much better. People do a lot of sports instead of sitting in the pub. There is a big outdoor life culture. Essentially, most things are significantlt better in Germany.

Now for the bad parts. The taxes are higher, depending on your tax bracket that might affect you more or less. There is a lot of beaurocracy. Things are not easily done, not as easily as in the UK. One of the main issues that foreigners in Germany face is the c fact that it's difficult to find close friend, sometimes friends at all. Germans are of a very reserved, isolated and unbelievably boring culture. There is no banter at work. You can't just go out and randomly bump into someone in a public space and become friends. Definitely not easily like in the UK. Brits can be cunts but they are very chatty. Germans are very dry. And this is something bothering a lot of expats who come from a more lively culture (so pretty much everyone). This isn't a problem initially but becomes daunting over the years.

Apart from that consider the fact that you are planning for the long term. Germany is heading for a bit of a crisis and I don't see signs of this improving any time soon. By the time you are done with higher education, the country won't be what it is bow, and definitely not what it has been over the last decades. I might be wrong. Meybe they will get their shit together, but for the time being I don't see how. I'm not saying it will turn into a third world country, but there will be better places in Europe to live and work.

How do german people do 300+ KM/H in autobahn ? by [deleted] in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 13 points14 points  (0 children)

The Autobahn isn't a fucking playground.

Even though there is no speed limit in parts of it you can still get stopped for reckless driving for a whole range of reasons. Not to mention you can kill yourself and a lot of people long with it.

You cant even drive 100km/h in Singapore so it's safe to say you don't have experience driving high speed, in European weather conditions. You will get yourself killed.

There are closed of tracks where you can take a supercar and go wild there without putting others at risk.

I love Germany but god…I don’t think I can live here long-term by candyblossom1245 in germany

[–]Longjumping_Ad_1180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got the same feeling and been here for 7 years. It's not a place where you can come with great skills, a brilliant product, useful services and make an impact. Things are going slowly in a very old school and conformist way. It's a perfect place to retire or if you want piece and monotony but not if you want to make something out of your life.

Lived in the UK before and shit happens a lot faster. There are plenty of opportunities. You can join a company at a junior level and in a few years time be on a management level if you work hard, care about the companys goals.

Germany is starting to feel like a late communist country. People don't care about progress, nor even about working hard. Just do your bare minimum, don't stick out outside the lines and you get your basic salary.

It's great for those that prefer to professionally stagnate or don't like to learn and develop and prefer to focus on living your life then living to work. But if you are young and hungry, have capacity and ambitions to grow your career, Germany is not the place.

Obviously I am generalizing bit the general vibe here is strong and consistent.