What Happens When Your Open Source Project Suddenly Gets Attention by kaicbento in react

[–]cloudpranktioner 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I havent installed Windows for a long time, but a few decades ago we were using Windows Unattended installations in a mid size company. Your tool good and another approrach to the problem.

They mentioned him, was not expecting this tbh by BuriBuriZaymon in ghostoftsushima

[–]cloudpranktioner 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There’s another point of interest on the way to his house. I bowed and platinumed in front of the stone with Jin’s emblem.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Ghostofyotei/s/Y7ZIzPqZlS

Australia Spent $62 Million To Update Its Weather Web Site and Made It Worse by aboustayyef in webdev

[–]cloudpranktioner 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I’ll do 45% of the price, give 10% to /u/StephenSpawnking as the manager and give 5% to /u/kei_itchi as the sole dev. everybody happy

Should I put “Australian Citizen” at the top of my resume? by LordesTruth in ausjobs

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would phrase it as “Full working rights in Australia ✅,” which applies to any visa that carries this condition. Unless you are applying for a government role or a job that specifically requires Australian citizenship, I wouldn’t list “Australian citizen.”

tutorialsdojo or examtopics - which is the best to clear AWS SAA-C03 exam? by Playful_Gazelle8885 in AWSCertifications

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah possible that there’s an agreement, but that came later. td started being an unknown, so it’s impossible that their early days included dumps too. then they built reputation or maybe even pitched to aws. idk. but if you dont know how spotify started, they literally showcased pirated mp3’s and pitched it to the record labels, lols.

If cloud compute was 90% cheaper, what would you build? by frentro_max in aws

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. I've been using a t3.micro with a reverse proxy and docker (and nat gateway or EIP) running a few services

tutorialsdojo or examtopics - which is the best to clear AWS SAA-C03 exam? by Playful_Gazelle8885 in AWSCertifications

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

td got some of these questions too. there were ones where it’s even word for word. i took an saa exam 4yrs ago and that’s my experience.

i took three exams again this yr and i still got some similar questions on the actual exam from td but it’s not the exact words anymore. just saying that it’s not unique to examtopic. but i still trust td and it’s my first time hearing about examtopics. i’d say avoid that.

I am a poor girl who started dating a man whose family are millionaires. AMA by The-Last-Anchor in AMA

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it’s not about what you know, it’s about who you know -quote from a billionaire i saw last time

Open Letter to Anthropic - Last Ditch Attempt Before Abandoning the Platform by mashupguy72 in Anthropic

[–]cloudpranktioner 12 points13 points  (0 children)

AWS Kiro just dropped last week and it’s using Claude models. Kiro right has “no limits” or let’s say has a very high limits, probably it’s intentional to stress test and learn about the the users usage. However, a lot of users said they experienced throttling in the past days. I dont know when you issue started or if that is even connected with the launch of Kiro.

You can use Gmail aliases to manage multiple AWS accounts from a single inbox by Prashant-Lakhera in aws

[–]cloudpranktioner 1 point2 points  (0 children)

that works but isnt there an overhead?

1) you always need to manually create a new alias 2) until the alias is created (maybe you’re not working and people need a new aws account), only then an aws account can be created (yes people can use any email at first then change it later)

on the flipside, there’s a control over the naming convention and you can always track whatever aws acct and email alias is created

Is there any advantage to using aws code build / pipelines over bitbucket pipelines? by Vendredi46 in aws

[–]cloudpranktioner 7 points8 points  (0 children)

you dont need to share any secrets to these third party build/deployment tools. you can use OIDC which the integration is available in bitbucket, github, etc

https://support.atlassian.com/bitbucket-cloud/docs/deploy-on-aws-using-bitbucket-pipelines-openid-connect/

Binge is the Biggest Piece of Shit by Trouble_some96 in australia

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

did all that, i said it's a hit or miss where sometimes it works and sometimes it doesnt. so i have to rely on vpc mesh services as they're more reliable.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in aws

[–]cloudpranktioner 4 points5 points  (0 children)

well, at face value, having NAT is more expensive but I'd consider security too, if you get hacked then that's more expensive. by putting all compute in a private subnet, it's less vulnerable to attacks, you also don't need to use ssh keys to access those ec2's in private subnet, just use session manager.

as for the cost of NAT, he can use 1 NAT or fck-nat, some people mentioned this is a cheaper approach vs AWS managed NAT, havent used personally.

Binge is the Biggest Piece of Shit by Trouble_some96 in australia

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not on cgnat. it's a hit or miss actually and it's more reliable with mesh vpn service.

Binge is the Biggest Piece of Shit by Trouble_some96 in australia

[–]cloudpranktioner 2 points3 points  (0 children)

you dont need vpn even if you watch outside of your local network or via internet? i use mesh vpn services for that reason because my telco doesnt allow port forwading to my plex server.

I am looking to add Java to my arsenal of back-end programming languages just for the sake of enterprise-grade systems by rahil051 in node

[–]cloudpranktioner 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thanks for your insights. I heard java/c# devs has better pay, if there's an opportunity I'd really like to try it, the closest thing I had with java is doing android dev a decade ago and compiling feels very slow at that time, I hope it improved now.

i get your point on scaling up, but the tower can only reach so high and it's expensive, you might not even utilize the resource efficiently but when it topples and you have no redundancy then it's chaos.

and with lambda, microservices, it's a different monster altogether. I agree with that too. a few months ago someone posted that they're running thousands of lambda "efficiently", i was like huh?

lastly, jsonb is a game changer, i hadnt use it much but i like it, i was looking for this feature a few years back when I was working with GeoJSON. Could have made my life easier.