Currently the customers that are using Kubernetes integrate with our Docker integrations. We do see that Kubernetes is a growing use case and are looking into a dedicated integration (possibly through a CRD as you mentioned). Send us an email at support@doppler.com, we would love to hear about your specific use case with Kubernetes.
Yep my firm has over 900 targets and our bill went from around $4,000/year to almost $100,000/year. We’ve remained sped up our transition to K8s (long time coming and a silver lining)
I had a similar experience when playing Half Life for the first time. As a child grown up with Doom, Quake and perhaps Unreal (can’t remember if that came afterwards or not), it was the first one that really caught my imagination. That intro level on the monorail still rates as my best immersive gaming experience I’ve had.
I had forgotten how good it is. The whole game was very good. The next one, World at War was also good, but I didn't enjoy any of the later installments.
I used a service similar to this in 2011 after I moved back from Australia to UK. Australian banks charge a monthly fee if you don't deposit your salary into the account so after a few months I realized my now-defunct Australian current account was very close to $0 (I had left a few dollars in there when I left). I emailed them and asked them to close the account to which they replied I needed to send a snail-mail letter - I used a service like this (with scanned signature no-less) to do so because it was easier than sending my own international letter to them. I got an email back saying they needed me to send a real letter with a real signature. I replied saying they could keep my account open but I wouldn't be paying for any fees, the reply was swift "Your account is now closed".
In Poland the law theoretically mandates that a digital signature is just as good as a pen-and-paper one. But, when dealing with banks, one quickly finds that the law is one thing and the stone wall of your bank is another.
Here's how a typical discussion unrolls:
Bank: "To do X or Y, we require you to visit us in person or provide a written statement".
Me: "Here's my statement with a digital signature, attached as a PDF."
Bank (ignoring the PDF): "To do X or Y, we require you to visit us in person or provide a written statement".
Me: "The law says (specific citation goes here) that I have just provided a written and signed statement. Here it is again."
Bank (ignoring the PDF): "To do X or Y, we require you to visit us in person or provide a written statement".
By the way, I had this kind of stupid back-and-forth with mBank, which tries to position itself as a "modern and innovative" bank.
The only next step is to sue, but who would bother.
Scanned signature for sure. I once had a form rejected by the Australian equivalent of the DMV for it "appearing to have different handwriting in places", and another time a bank rejected a form for the signature being in a different colour ink to the rest of the form.
This is interesting. In the US, my 'signature' is always a picture or a doodle, sometimes I write famous people's names in sloppy cursive. If it was like an important contract or something, I might try a bit harder... but to be honest I don't truly have a 'signature', I can either write my name in my terrible handwriting, or not.
> If it was like an important contract or something, I might try a bit harder.
When I was sworn in as an attorney, they had us sign a book in the courthouse as part of the ceremony. They said that sometimes people used a fancy signature since it was a special occasion, and explicitly told us not to do that since they would sometimes be asked to compare a purported signature to one in the book.
In the US we have international “forever” stamps. If you have a sheet of a dozen of those, you just scrawl a reply, address an envelope, and drop it in the letter box.
In Fiji, we have those, but also prepaid envelopes that come with no stamps at all. You have a pack of those, and you just stick a letter in and then drop it in the letter box.
I just migrated from LastPass to 1Password7, happier with the GUI/interfaces but I hope they fix these issues up to at least make it harder to extract the passwords when in a locked state.
One thing that is nice about 1Password going to a subscription model is that they have to work for your business every month or every year. In the comment they made, they talked about looking into a transition to Rust, which has better memory security capabilities.
Used this site for various European adventures that were significantly more fulfilling and stress free vs not having this resource. Donated £30 to the cause. Thank you to the Man in Seat Sixty-One!
100% this. We have had a spate of crime, muggings and drug-related issues around our area in the last 6 months or so, the local police & residents have met numerous times about it. Lots of words and "please call the non-emergency 101 number when you see these gatherings" - I then spent an entire HOUR on hold to the 101 before giving up. A couple were mugged later that evening by that very group...