86box is a little different than dosbox in that it fully emulates the hardware. Performance might still be an issue in your case, though. I have an emulated voodoo banshee system for playing old games and it works great for my use case of supporting old glide games. My thinking being if it can support glide emulation that it would be able to support anything from the dos era. I could be wrong though.
You could always run it on top of 86box. There are YouTube tutorials on setting it up for various hardware levels.
Wait until they find out about Ansible.
My team heavily uses this: https://www.hashicorp.com/en/products/vault
It uses aged tokens to give access to secrets.
The docker container is easy enough to set up https://hub.docker.com/r/hashicorp/vault
For some reason my mobile client didn’t make the article link immediately obvious. That’s actually really interesting. Apparently I was under the same common misconception. So the shell in this case is choosing to continue after detecting the flush.
Ctrl+d terminates input on stdin to your currently running program or shell.
Well all float on, alright.
The only one they fear is you.
I may be misremembering. It may have had a smaller drive initially.
Pentium 200mmx, 32 mb ram, and I think a 5gig hard drive with windows 95. I don’t remember the original display adapter, but later it had a voodoo banshee put in it. We also upgraded the CPU to one of those evergreen technologies k6-2 400 MHz. Later we switched to windows 98 and a bigger hard drive. I think we must have upgraded the RAM too, but I don’t remember. It was a true ship of Theseus.
Edit: also don’t remember the original sound card but I think it ended with a sound blaster live with the emu10k chip.
It’s the wonders of Phong shading flat shading
If this is a serious question; they are from the program glxgears which is an opengl test program that renders them. So yes, they are 3d.
Sitting on my 7900xtx eating popcorn.
You should turn off ssh password logins on external facing servers at a minimum. Only use ssh keys, install fail2ban, disable ssh root logins, and make sure you have a firewall limiting ports to ssh and https.
This will catch most scripted login attempts.
If you want something more advanced, look into https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_Technical_Implementation_Guide and try to find an ansible playbook to apply them.
I have to say, satin is pretty nice. Especially for pants.
I’m stoked for this mod.