Phabricator is a suite of open source tools for peer code review, task management, and project communication.
Source: Phabricator
The 6th incarnation of Elmer's blog
Phabricator is a suite of open source tools for peer code review, task management, and project communication.
Source: Phabricator
C|M|LAW Library Blog | Westlaw Printing Enhancements: Dropbox and Star Pagination http://cmlawlibraryblog.classcaster.net/2015/05/19/westlaw-printing-enhancements-dropbox-and-star-pagination/
How to install Mumble VoIP Server on Ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet) https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/how-to-install-mumble-voip-server-on-ubuntu-15-04-vivid-vervet/
I recently had the opportunity to reinstall Windows 7 on my laptop and figured it was a good time to make a list of the programs and utilities I use regularly on Windows. Most stuff is open source and/or free. There are a few commercial packages that I use a lot that I really like so I’ve included those on the list too. I don’t work in Windows that often, but when I do these are the things I use.
A free software for distributed and secured communication
Source: Ring | A free software for distributed and secured communication
Each EC2 instance has its own clock and is fully under your control; AWS does not manage instance clocks. An instance clock can be affected by many factors. Depending on these factors, it may implement or skip the leap second. It may also be isolated and not synchronize to an external time system. If you need your EC2 instance clocks to be predictable, you can use NTP to synchronize your clocks to time servers of your choice. For more information about how to synchronize clocks, see the following documentation:
- Instances using Amazon Linux AMIs: Setting the Time for Your Linux Instance.
- Instances using Amazon-provided Microsoft Windows AMIs: Setting the Time for a Windows Instance.
- Instances using other AMIs: Please contact your AMI provider (the information in the preceding bullet points may also be helpful).
Adding the leap second is currently the standard practice. If you use public time servers, like time servers from ntp.org (the default for Amazon Linux AMIs) or time.windows.com (the default for Amazon Windows AMIs), your instance will see the leap second unless these synchronization services announce a different practice.
Source: Look Before You Leap – The Coming Leap Second and AWS | AWS Official Blog
A reminder to check how (y)our EC2 instances are going to deal with this before it happens at the end of June.
78% of companies say they run operations on open source | Opensource.com http://opensource.com/business/15/5/report-future-open-source-survey