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Selinux suprises

When it comes to SELinux, many of us initially find it to be quite a hassle. In fact, I had to change the topic of this article because my original plan was to discuss how to create your own control center using Grafana, Prometheus, and Golang. However, once I started deploying containers, everything took a turn for the worse…

The world doesnt end with scripting

When you start your Linux journey or follow Linux-based YouTubers, you often hear them praising the benefits of writing scripts.

They encourage you to create your own scripts for various tasks because

“scripts are simple yet powerful tools to get your work done.”

They suggest downloading and using scripts to experience these benefits firsthand, advocating for Bash as the go-to scripting language due to its versatility and ease of use.

However, what they don’t mention is…

Humanise Servers With Ansible

With the endless anthropomorphization of AI and tech, we often think that technology is starting to become more human-like.

However, we rarely realize that what truly surrounds us are millions of servers, like an army of starwars clones.

From a server’s perspective, it doesn’t fully comprehend what is happening. A server doesn’t know that it is a server unless we assign it a name or identifier.

You might name your favorite virtual machine “Janey” and live happily ever after. But what happens when you have 5,000 Janeys or an entire cluster of them?

Succumb to the tech lifestyle

Nowadays, there are many movements and lifestyles to follow: alpha, sigma, red pill, woke, leftist, rightist. But nobody says anything about the technicians.


Can IT professionals beat the alpha male?

The only journal worth reading

Everyone has that moment in their life when they think, “Maybe today is the day I’ll start journaling.” It’s just a fleeting thought. You pick up the pen, only to realize that after a long day, you struggle to recall anything significant. Or worse, there’s an overwhelming amount to write about, leaving you torn between writing it all and watching TV with your favorite anime girlfriend. Fortunately, we have computers

Dont break easy preserve best version of your sytsem

I’m sure you remember the feeling of your perfect setup.

Special ordered coffee from Network Chuck.

The thrill of the customized Xmonad guessing your current mood and selecting the wallpaper accordingly. All VSCode themes and plugins meticulously selected. The urge to spout code like there’s no tomorrow.

You open your computer

Only to realize the disk is corrupted and all is gone…

There’s no turning back unless you have a photographic memory and even then, it’s so hard to redo this whole thing again.

What if I tell you there’s a way to preserve your best system self?

Buy my course at www… No, I’m kidding, the recipe is simple.

Linux unmasked

When you use an OS like Linux, you must constantly familiarize yourself with the feeling that you will be surprised by it. You can’t just learn Linux… But regardless of the surprise, you usually have a solid understanding of the system. You know more or less how things work, what’s required, and so on. That’s what I thought while studying for the CompTIA Linux+ certification.

You know more or less how things work, what’s required, and so on.

That’s what I thought while studying for the CompTIA Linux+ certification.

I’m sure you have in mind Linux mantras “everything is a file” or “you control the processes”.

But little do you know…

Linux
scientist

The gold is in the block

People often find excitement in the world of crypto, blockchain, and NFTs, only to fall victim to scams or invest in worthless tokens.

Instead of digging into the systems behind all these treasures, they’re all about owning stuff on the web.
It’s like they’re hunting for treasures without a map

Learning through self-destruction

Terminal is one of “the last remaining things that bestows absolute power upon you”. cover

It allows you to witness the entire operating system disappear and then be reborn in a matter of seconds.

I strongly advise you to try this at home sudo rm -rfv /