I can't even
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@dashrender said in I can't even:
@tim_g said in I can't even:
There really is no need to be rude, though. Could have just corrected him like Scott did.
LOL, I didn't say anything rude.
I just posted that I made an account on SW so I could LOL that thread. it was about as tame a post as one could make.
You already had an account, though.
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This is so weird that this was revived, but a classic ICE...
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/800241-what-is-the-equivalent-goto-command-in-powershell
Someone NEW actually wanted to use a GOTO statement? What decade is this?
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@scottalanmiller lol... loops or functions are far superior in every aspect!
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@tim_g said in I can't even:
@scottalanmiller lol... loops or functions are far superior in every aspect!
Just a tad.
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@scottalanmiller said in I can't even:
This is so weird that this was revived, but a classic ICE...
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/800241-what-is-the-equivalent-goto-command-in-powershell
Someone NEW actually wanted to use a GOTO statement? What decade is this?
At least it wasn't a GOSUB.
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Do people really think that this little information is enough to answer a question like this?
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/2102544-will-this-hardware-be-sufficient-for-these-3-vms
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69% got this right, that's not great. But let's look at what is more important...
31% of people read this question and decided that of those four options, that anonymous provides a mechanism for unique logon identification. Think about that for a moment. 31% thought anonymous was... not anonymous.
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SQL has no command called CHAR. SQL doesn't have a function called CHAR either. The question doesn't even have a reference and called SQL "sql".
Even in a different language, like T-SQL that does have a CHAR function, this isn't what it does. In T-SQL char can be used to insert control characters into character strings.
In SQL there is a CHAR data type, but a data type is a long way from being a command and can't be described in a verb like way like the question.
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The question isn't wrong, it's just mind blowing that 66% of people in a community that talks about this ad nauseum got this wrong. This is SO basic.... everyone talks about how it is software RAID there on and on and on. Even if you have no idea what it is, it's name tells you it is RAID ruling out D, there is no such thing as Virtual RAID ruling out C, no one has ever named a hardware RAID system ruling out A. B is the only plausible answer even without knowing what the question is!
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@tim_g said in I can't even:
This guy...
See, this is where I run into issues. I get his logic but I've had more stuff not work on CentOS/RHEL because of missing modern libraries/applications/programs then I have break on Fedora. I'd rather have it work and maybe break then not work at all.
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I'm also amazed that no one has heard of Dom0, which is how Hyper-V (and Xen) are implemented.
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@coliver said in I can't even:
@tim_g said in I can't even:
This guy...
See, this is where I run into issues. I get his logic but I've had more stuff not work on CentOS/RHEL because of missing modern libraries/applications/programs then I have break on Fedora. I'd rather have it work and maybe break then not work at all.
And then there's my problem... I just don't have the time to deep dive into it to set him straight like he probably has the time to do... so unless it's a quick response, I just don't have the time...
So what can I do. I'm just gonna leave it.
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@coliver said in I can't even:
I'm also amazed that no one has heard of Dom0, which is how Hyper-V (and Xen) are implemented.
Ya, I wish I had more time to put into posting.
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It's hard to break people of practices that have worked for them over time I've noticed
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@tim_g said in I can't even:
@coliver said in I can't even:
I'm also amazed that no one has heard of Dom0, which is how Hyper-V (and Xen) are implemented.
Ya, I wish I had more time to put into posting.
And this:
https://blog.scottlowe.org/2008/07/01/citrix-hyper-v-and-the-future-of-xenserver/
https://blogs.vmware.com/virtualreality/2008/10/hyper-v-server.htmlThis are old but explain it well.
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I can't believe how hard explaining what bare metal means, or what a hypervisor is, is today. This should only have been slightly complicated in the 1990s.
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@coliver said in I can't even:
I'm also amazed that no one has heard of Dom0, which is how Hyper-V (and Xen) are implemented.
And how Vmware ESX was implemented. So even the thing most of them reference was like that, too.
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I think that that thread actually did pretty well. Good, solid discussion, at least by the end.