17%
30.01.2024
"The 2024 Tech Boom."
4. A different industry pundit will predict "The Great 2024 Tech Crash."
5. A technology writer will post an article titled "2024: The Year of the Linux Desktop."
6. Industry
17%
16.05.2013
" according to the assessments after the first tests hardly helped improve the situation. However, this criticism relates primarily to desktop use, and in particular to errors in the new Gnome version 3.6
17%
12.09.2013
Version 3.0, mobile platforms such as Android and iOS can also be used as clients. However, just before the deadline for this article, I was informed [6] that the iOS client had been removed from the App
17%
14.03.2013
is when I found out that my still relatively new first generation iPad had become obsolete, albeit subtly, when I saw the announcement that iOS 6 was unavailable for it. I reacted badly. I swore off all
17%
03.02.2022
version was recently released (AOS LTS 5.20 and AOS STS 6.0), it can be assumed that a new Community version will soon follow.
To install the Community Edition (CE), you need to download the corresponding
17%
26.03.2025
it with the & character):
for i in $(seq 1 6); do spark-submit --master k8s://$APISERVER --deploy-mode cluster --name spark-wordcount --class org.apache.spark.examples.JavaWordCount local
17%
07.10.2025
in which security and data integrity are paramount, especially when it comes to information with EU-RESTRICTED and NATO-RESTRICTED information [6].
Provisioning Keys in the WKD
A Web Key Directory (WKD
17%
31.10.2025
computers running the Linux distributions CentOS 5 and 6, Debian 5 and 6, Fedora, Gentoo, Mageia, openSUSE, RHEL 5 and 6, Scientific Linux, and Ubuntu 10.04, 11.04, and 12.04. Additionally, it can handle
17%
31.10.2025
map for a setup consisting of six OSDs (i.e., individual storage devices in servers) distributed over three racks:
crushtool --num_osds 6 -o crush.example.map --build host straw 1 rack straw 2 root
17%
31.10.2025
the numbers, sizes, capacities, and prices of the 1990s with those of today. For example, in 1995, a 500MB hard disk was considered large; today, my iPhone 4 has a 16GB capacity, of which I have just over 6GB