I hereby claim:
- I am jorgemanzo on github.
- I am manzoj (https://keybase.io/manzoj) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASAHzxnCruWwa06U3IJcsxgEgH8YkfS-kFeflMNuEQ4Ypgo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
group: suppliers_schema | |
Suppliers = { | |
sid:number, sname:string, city:string | |
1, 'Acme', 'Virgina' | |
2, 'BlackMesa', 'Atlanta' | |
3, 'ValveCorp', 'Seattle' | |
} | |
Parts = { |
Resume for 2019 View
Summarize the change in less than 50 characters | |
Because: | |
- Explain the reasons you made this change | |
- Make a new bullet for each reason | |
- Each line should be under 72 characters | |
Explain exactly what was done in this commit with more depth than the | |
50 character subject line. Remember to wrap at 72 characters! |
Like /u/vikaskrr said, you could wait for eOS 5.1 which should drop soon(ish). If you're like me and hate waiting, you can follow what I did to get eOS working on my Ryzen 3900X that I use at work:
The general flow here is that Elementary is using old versions of standard linux packages and an old Linux kernel. This can cause newer devices to not work at all or have device incompatability. In my case, the old Linux kernel and old system daemon caused issues with my Ryzen 3000 chip. What we want to do is patch the Elementary OS ISO to use up to date packages and a brand spanking new linux kernel, all before we flash it onto a bootable media and try to install eOS. This can be done by effectively "logging into" the ISO and getting a terminal prompt for the ISO, performing your changes, and then rebuilding the ISO with your changes. Here we go!
If you have an existing Linux Distro installed on your sy
version: '3.3' | |
services: | |
postgres: | |
image: postgres | |
restart: always | |
volumes: | |
- db_data:/var/lib/postgresql/data | |
graphql-engine: | |
image: hasura/graphql-engine:v1.0.0 | |
ports: |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Ssh key | |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -f id_rsa -N '' | |
# copy them over | |
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa root@192.168.1.21 | |
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa root@192.168.1.22 | |
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa root@192.168.1.23 | |
ssh-copy-id -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa root@192.168.1.24 |
I have worked for Oregon State University as a Student Analyst / Programmer for two years now, while completing a B.S. in Computer Science. Most of my work is in a Java-like language called Apex, along with some front-end JavaScript. My work runs on the Salesforce platform used by the university. I also like to contribute to open-source projects from time to time.
Some of my favorite topics
#!/bin/bash | |
printf "Adding enpass repo...........\n" | |
echo "deb https://apt.enpass.io/ stable main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/enpass.list | |
wget -O - https://apt.enpass.io/keys/enpass-linux.key | apt-key add - | |
apt update | |
apt install enpass |
package main | |
// See comments in main(), this is written in Go. | |
import ( | |
"log" | |
"sort" | |
) | |
func makeMap(items []string) map[string]int { |