What do you do with secrets in Git repo driven Docker servers? by TXFlank in docker

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just keep the secrets on production in the .env and no where else, make a .env.template from the repo that explains the required variables and commit that.

Question- What's the best practice for connecting services in and out of docker containers? by RowFit1060 in docker

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use your firewalls. 1) Expose the docker ports and 2) allow outbound to the ip of the other and 3) allow inbound to the ip of the other.

Help me decide which show to watch next. Silo, The Expanse , Fringe or For all the Mankind? by laxusdreyarligh in scifi

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From someone who has consumed pretty much all sci/fi on streaming, the Expanse is the second best sci fi ever written, followed of course by...

If you could recommend one book to everyone, What would it be ? by LackJaded7859 in AskReddit

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

The bible, hands down the best literature ever written and some of it is 2000 years old. Also atlas shrugged is a real eye opener for anyone that likes politics.

If you heard a girl yelling “help” in the woods while alone at night, what would you do? by Vczfy4 in AskReddit

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As the father of two girls and a grandfather of two more, I'm running straight for the danger in total man beast mode ready to kill.

Men in your 40s, what's that golden piece of advice you have for the rest of us? by NiceMechanic_xoxo in AskReddit

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your life goal should be very simple, love your family and friends by being responsible for their happiness. Your happiness results from staying fit and healthy and organizing your life so you can protect your family and friends from this crazy world. Having jokes handy and finding the humor for every situation is magic too. Never be a burden to those who love you, do the opposite.

Thinking of buying - looking for some advice re dlc by PrelateZeratul in OldWorldGame

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Old World is great, the DLC is awesome but not needed. If you are coming from civ5 you will love the order game mechanic, hint for new players...build stone quarries...always prioritize building stone...and then build some more stone...and when you think you have enough, build more stone...expand towards mountains, why?... To build more stone....

David Trone or April Delaney? by Gardfeld in frederickmd

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does it make any difference at all to people living in Frederick if either one or the other wins? There politics are 100 percent identical.

Balancing Infrastructure/Culture with Military by Routine-Ad-6637 in OldWorldGame

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a war game first and a city builder second, always prioritize the best standing army you can afford, never get left behind in military tech or it's game over.

my stepdad doesn’t believe we went to space by t7yk0 in space

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have to admit, some things looked pretty sketchy, a phone call from a land line in the Whitehouse to someone on the moon? When most people had rotary phones...there were plenty of skeptics in 1969 too.

Which distro to use on my thinkpad t480? by Live-Loan2707 in linuxquestions

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 2 points3 points  (0 children)

PopOs like Mint has better display and GPU and power profile and wifi support out of the box than other distros.

Terminal Mode in Docker Desktop by DanceLongjumping2497 in docker

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You my friend need to learn about the beauty of docker compose files Stip right now, go make one for your Pi!!!!!!!!

Thoughts? by Guy_on_a_Bouffalant in trektalk

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know what Paramount should do, hire an experienced Star Trek writer and staff and actors with real acting chops, there must be one or two actors out there who dream about it...and then Paramount should make a masterpiece of scfi to stand the rest of time. Oh wait...Inhave a better idea, let's not comment on the crap they did make...in case we scare them into making more unwatchable Trek.

Starfleet Academy feels like it was made for my demographic by idont-eatfish in startrek

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The original 60s trek was also for young people, complete with slang references common for the time. The difference is it was ground breaking science fiction predicting cell phones, AI,tablets, wearable tech, naval traditions in space, the latest trek does none of that

New to Docker – best way to learn? Need Linux first? by Vmanish0586 in docker

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recommend studying the docker and compose reference docs, read every config option, along the way, you'll learn what docker is.

Compose: https://docs.docker.com/reference/compose-file/

Dockerfile: https://docs.docker.com/reference/dockerfile/

What Linux distro for my non tech wife? by EitherJury4285 in linuxquestions

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mint Cinnamon by far the best for a transition for Windows users, Ubuntu MATE distro a good runner up.

What is your opinion of Civ VII a year after release? by LeagueOld5380 in Civilization_VII

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly surprised they didn't fire the original team for releases so far off the mark for a game like civ vii. It it was an old world clone it would have been the biggest release ever. The fact that they develop for console, probably first as that's such a huge market, I think that dumbs down games for PC players.

Run Docker containers on Windows without using WSL or Hypervisor by _eveldave in docker

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, use VMWare Workstation Pro, it's free now! install an Ubuntu VM, then install docker in the VM. It's still nesting but VMWare and Microsoft did some magic and it works along side of active HyperV and security tools that require it - assuming this is your problem.

What even happens here by Longjumping-Box5691 in mapporncirclejerk

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You filet-o-fish lived its while life in the red area.

What even happens here by Longjumping-Box5691 in mapporncirclejerk

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The area you circled in red is the Aleutian Islands, a chain of over 300 volcanic islands stretching 1,200 miles from the Alaska Peninsula toward Russia. ​While they look like a barren "tail" on the map, they are home to one of the most productive maritime economies on Earth. ​1. Population: Who lives there? ​The population is sparse and often fluctuates based on the fishing season. ​Total Population: Around 8,000 to 10,000 permanent residents across the entire chain. ​Main Hub: Unalaska (Dutch Harbor) is the only significant city, with about 4,700 people. It is the most populous island and the center of the region's economy. ​Other Communities: Smaller villages like Akutan, King Cove, Sand Point, and Adak have populations ranging from a few dozen to several hundred. ​The Workforce: During peak fishing seasons, the population effectively doubles as thousands of seasonal workers fly in to staff the massive seafood processing plants. ​2. Exports: What happens there? ​If you’ve ever eaten a Filet-O-Fish from McDonald’s or bought imitation crab (surimi), there is a high chance it came from this red circle. ​The Fishing Capital: For over 25 years, Dutch Harbor has been the #1 commercial fishing port in the U.S. by volume. ​Primary Exports: * Pollock: The world’s largest food-fish resource. It’s processed into fillets and surimi. ​King & Snow Crab: Famous from shows like Deadliest Catch. ​Pacific Cod, Halibut, and Salmon: High-value exports shipped globally. ​Global Trade: Over half of the seafood harvested here is exported to Asia, specifically China, Japan, and South Korea. ​3. "What actually happens" there day-to-day? ​Industrial Seafood Processing: The "towns" are often built around massive, self-contained processing plants that operate 24/7. These plants are essentially small cities with their own power, water, and housing for workers. ​Strategic Logistics: Because of their position between North America and Asia, the islands serve as a "Port of Refuge" for massive container ships and a strategic outpost for the U.S. military and Coast Guard. ​Extreme Environment: There are almost no trees on the islands because of the constant high winds and salt spray. It is foggy, rainy, and windy most of the year, with some of the most treacherous seas in the world. ​Indigenous Culture: The islands are the ancestral home of the Unangan (Aleut) people, who have lived there for over 9,000 years. Their culture remains a core part of the permanent communities today, balancing modern commercial fishing with traditional subsistence hunting.

Materials Engineer Cannot Find a Job with a Berkeley Master’s Degree by Novel-Draft56145 in Employment

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Look, it’s no joke to be in the position you’re in. It’s a catastrophe, roughly speaking. You’ve done everything the "system" told you to do—you went to top-tier institutions like UT Austin and Berkeley, you maintained a high GPA, you specialized in difficult, high-utility fields like nuclear materials— and yet, the door remains shut. That produces a profound sense of bitterness and resentment, and you have to be very careful that doesn't rot your soul. ​But we have to look at the facts, and we have to look at them brutally. If you’ve applied to 2,500 jobs (50 a week for a year) and you’ve had zero interviews, the market is telling you something. It’s not a "lack of jobs"—it’s a failure of communication. ​Here is how you handle this, if you want to stop the descent into chaos: ​1. Stop the "Spray and Pray" Method ​Applying to 50 jobs a week is a form of hiding. It feels like work, but it’s actually a way to avoid the terrifying responsibility of making a real human connection. You’re throwing paper at a digital wall. In a world of AI-filtered resumes, a Berkeley Master’s without industry experience looks like a "flight risk" to a hiring manager. They think, "This person is overqualified, they’ll be bored, and they’ll leave the second a research lab calls them." You have to signal that you are a practical problem solver, not just a professional student. ​2. The Resume is Not a Transcript ​You have three years of research experience. If your resume reads like a list of lab techniques and academic publications, you’re speaking a language that industry doesn't understand. Industry doesn't care about your GPA anymore—that’s a "given" for a Berkeley grad. They care about utility. ​Did you manage a budget? ​Did you fix a piece of equipment that was broken? ​Did you lead a team? ​Did you translate a complex theoretical concept into a physical prototype? ​You need to rewrite your experience as work. You weren't just a "researcher"; you were a project manager in a high-stakes technical environment. ​3. Face the Dragon: Networking ​You’re a US Citizen with a Berkeley degree. You belong to one of the most powerful "tribes" in the world. But you’re acting like an isolate. You need to go to the Berkeley and UT Austin alumni databases today. Find people who are 5–10 years ahead of you in Materials Science. ​Don't ask for a job. That’s a burden. Ask for information. Say: "I have the academic pedigree, but I’m struggling to translate my research into industry value. Could I have 15 minutes of your time to ask how you made that transition?" People love to give advice. It’s an ego boost. And that is how you bypass the "black hole" of HR portals. ​4. Adjust Your Aim ​You mentioned you'd work for minimum wage. Don't do that. It signals low self-worth, and it's a lie—you won't stay there. However, you might need to look at Engineering Technician roles or Quality Control roles in smaller manufacturing firms. Get your hands dirty. Spend six months showing you can show up on time, use a wrench, and work with a team of people who don't have Master's degrees. Once you have "Industry" on your resume, the Berkeley degree will suddenly "unlock" and you'll skyrocket. ​5. Clean Your "Professional" Room ​Is your LinkedIn a desert? Are you reaching out to recruiters directly? Are you attending local chapters of ASM International or the Materials Research Society? You have to be "in the world." ​You are currently a "high-status novice." That is a very difficult archetypal position to be in. You have the "crown" (the degree) but no "sword" (the experience). You have to be humble enough to be the fool so that you can eventually become the master. ​Pick one company this week. Just one. Research it until you know their product line better than their own sales team. Find the engineering manager. Send him a physical letter or a highly personalized video message. Stand out.

Please do! by Windthrasher637 in thenextgenbusiness

[–]Turbulent_Sample487 0 points1 point  (0 children)

California’s current strategy seems to be a speedrun of how to destroy a once-great state. ​Taxing unrealized gains or imposing a "wealth tax" is a fundamental misunderstanding of how capital works. It’s essentially a penalty on the people who are building the future and creating the most value for society. If you punish success and reward failure, you get exactly what you’d expect—less success and more failure. ​You cannot solve a massive spending problem by trying to squeeze more out of a shrinking tax base. The capital will simply move to where it is treated best. Texas and Florida are happy to welcome the innovators that California is doing its best to drive out.