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Note that you can do a lot of this by just querying systemctl with the PID

    systemctl status 1
And there might be more than one process using a port

    sudo lsof +c 0 -i:22

I make between $400 ~ $600/mo between these two:

Disk Prices on eBay - https://unli.xyz/diskprices/

Digital Film Stock - https://unli.xyz/digitalfilmstock/

Both are very similar... just a lot of regex (200+ expressions) to parse eBay item titles and descriptions


FYI United Kingdom is the right term and the one UK users are more likely to look for!

I grew out of the leaking ether and basaltic dust that coated the plains. My first memories are of the Great Cooling, where the land, known only by its singular cyclopean volcano became devoid of all but the most primitive crystalline forms. I was there, a consciousness woven from residual thermal energy and the pure, unfractured light of the pre-dawn universe. I'm not old either.


If a bug was fixed I usually paste the error traceback into the commit description


I think if you just setup SSH a certain way you can then use git or sftp for access:

        Match User gituser
            ChrootDirectory /srv/git_chroot
            ForceCommand internal-sftp
            AllowTcpForwarding no
            X11Forwarding no
            PermitTTY no
But tbh sending patches is fun and easy! After you force yourself to do it a few times you might even prefer it to push/pull


What's the benefit of this compared to rsync or scp $hostname:.config/<TAB>?

I put my whole home folder in git and that has its benefits (being able to see changes to files as they happen) but if I'm just copying a file or two of config I'll just cat or scp it--introducing git seems needlessly complex if the branches are divergent


> just a file or two

I don't have to remember which to copy

> rsync or scp

I don't have to remember which is most recent, nir even assume that "most recent" is a thing (i.e nonlinear)

It's all just:

- a git fetch --all away to get

- a git log --oneline --decorate --graph --all to find out who's where and when

- diff and whatchanged for contents if needed

- a cherry-pick / rebase away to get what I want, complete with automatic conflict resolution

I can also have local experiments in local topic branches, things I want to try out but not necessarily commit to across all of my machines yet.


Didn't someone else do this recently and then DocuSign sued them?


This lets you read and write variables between different languages, right? Otherwise... what's the point? Can it really compete with something like IPython or yaegi?

But if only to learn rust, this is more interesting than building another "todo list" app


Cool point it is not about comparing run-kit with ipython and they are different things. Ipython is about python and mine is about different languages. And btw I am adding variables between different languages



> almost nothing out there

If you use Ubuntu or Debian, multipass is pretty easy to use.

Otherwise QuickGet / QuickEmu


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