Odds are you have met someone with it, but the eye color shifts depending on what colors are around them.
rolaulten
You know someone pitched the idea as a bullshit excuse to use a bunch of dynamite and everyone jumped on the bandwagon. For anyone who does not know, Florence OR is this little seaside town with not that much going on.
We need less entertainment that runs forever and more that has a plan for how long it should be.
In this case it ran as long as it was feasible, then a little longer and then they where done.
When I was taught it it was not pure left/right. Rather a method to differentiate levels of Libertarianism form other branches of liberalism focused on social justice (rising tide and all that). Any idea where you read it? Poli sci wonk phrasing being included into more popular literature is always fun to see.
I'm in a similar boat. Flew across the country because after "missing" 2017s I immediately felt regret. Now I'm debating Europe in 2026.
But the colors. Can someone who understands this stuff please explain to me why a simple reduction in light in the lead up to (and following) totality makes all the colors seem "wrong"?
That's the scary thing. It looks like this narrowly missed getting into Debian and RH. Downstream downstream that is... everything.
Yep. Sounds right. Welcome to learning docker compose.
I assume there is nothing in the database? Delete the file under volumes and relaunch. At a guess your database for initialized without a user and is now just in that state.
As others have said, remove the # to uncommit the line.
Commits are a special type of line in many languages that allow us humans to stick info (generally for humans) inside the code that the interpreter skips over. From the machines perspective this block looks like:
environment:
POSTGRES_PASSWORD: HDFnWzVZ5bGI
Note that the entire line is missing.
As a side note. Please change the password as it's been posted to the Internet.
Along a similar vain to making a git friend, buy your sysadmins/ops people a box of doughnuts once in a while. They (generally) all code and will have some knowledge of what you are working on.
As an ops person I disagree! Our arbitrary changes are documented in a jira ticket in the ops project. If you can't view the ops project fill free to open a ticket in ops and we will triage it when we feel like it.
Aka sso.tax