diff options
29 files changed, 61 insertions, 68 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md b/gemfeed/2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md index aee6a4f5..f608bf60 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md +++ b/gemfeed/2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md @@ -161,6 +161,6 @@ Did you like what you saw? Have a look at Codeberg to see my other poems too: [https://codeberg.org/snonux/perl-poetry](https://codeberg.org/snonux/perl-poetry) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md b/gemfeed/2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md index 9e46d453..8cea1238 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md +++ b/gemfeed/2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md @@ -36,6 +36,6 @@ It was a pain in the ass. My next mobile phone MUST have a full QWERTY keyboard. At the moment I am in Sofia, Bulgaria. Here I can use at least an unprotected WLAN hotspot which belongs to one of the neighbours which I don’t know in person, and it is not blocking any port at all :) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md b/gemfeed/2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md index fe5a3d50..d3fa225d 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md +++ b/gemfeed/2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md @@ -169,6 +169,6 @@ fun my_filter f l = foldr (make_filter_fn f) [] l my_filter f l = foldr (make_filter_fn f) [] l ``` -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md b/gemfeed/2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md index 1a62bc54..e2918e1b 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md +++ b/gemfeed/2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md @@ -97,6 +97,6 @@ first 10 nat_pairs_not_null [http://www.haskell.org/](http://www.haskell.org/) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md b/gemfeed/2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md index 0edd8c8c..8df682dc 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md +++ b/gemfeed/2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md @@ -505,6 +505,6 @@ You can find all of this on the GitHub page. There is also an "examples" folders [https://codeberg.org/snonux/fype](https://codeberg.org/snonux/fype) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md b/gemfeed/2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md index 02ba21b6..41e0a3eb 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md +++ b/gemfeed/2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md @@ -158,6 +158,6 @@ You can find PerlDaemon (including the examples) at: [https://codeberg.org/snonux/perldaemon](https://codeberg.org/snonux/perldaemon) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md b/gemfeed/2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md index 3e9627e6..9b5814de 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md +++ b/gemfeed/2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md @@ -105,6 +105,6 @@ fib(10) = 55 It's entertaining to play with :-). -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md b/gemfeed/2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md index 39b0880c..fed382e0 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md +++ b/gemfeed/2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md @@ -175,6 +175,6 @@ exit Reboot & test! Enjoy! -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md b/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md index cbe5c8b7..07bea1fe 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md +++ b/gemfeed/2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md @@ -37,6 +37,6 @@ The solution is adding another USB drive (2TB) with an encryption container (GEL I am thinking of buying a second 2TB USB drive and setting it up the same way as the first one. So I could alternate the backups. One drive would be at the secret location, and the other drive would be at home. And these drives would swap place after each cycle. This would give some security about the failure of that drive, and I would have to go to the secret location only once (swapping the drives) instead of twice (picking that drive up to update the data + bringing it back to the remote location). -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md b/gemfeed/2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md index e071225d..4d7630c5 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md +++ b/gemfeed/2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md @@ -385,6 +385,6 @@ Of course I am operating multiple Jails on the same host this way with Puppet: All done in a pretty automated manor. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md b/gemfeed/2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md index 443746e4..cf5d3d8f 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md +++ b/gemfeed/2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md @@ -25,6 +25,6 @@ Whenever I update the offsite backup, I am doing it to the drive, which is kept Furthermore, I added scrubbing ("zpool scrub...") to the script. It ensures that the file system is consistent and that there are no bad blocks on the disk and the file system. To increase the reliability, I also run a "zfs set copies=2 zroot". That setting is also synchronized to the offsite ZFS pool. ZFS stores every data block to disk twice now. Yes, it consumes twice as much disk space, making it better fault-tolerant against hardware errors (e.g. only individual disk sectors going bad). -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md b/gemfeed/2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md index 79d69860..46a059f2 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md +++ b/gemfeed/2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md @@ -234,6 +234,6 @@ Whenever I have to change a DNS entry, all I have to do is: That's much more comfortable now than manually clicking at some web UIs at Schlund Technologies. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md b/gemfeed/2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md index 98b0edce..7151edbb 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md +++ b/gemfeed/2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md @@ -81,6 +81,6 @@ How to overcome this? You need to take it further. If you want to take it further, type "Object-Oriented Programming with ANSI-C" into your favourite internet search engine, you will find some crazy stuff. Some go as far as writing a C preprocessor in AWK, which takes some object-oriented pseudo-C and transforms it to plain C so that the C compiler can compile it to machine code. This is similar to how the C++ language had its origins. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md b/gemfeed/2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md index 1e85daca..d13c388c 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md +++ b/gemfeed/2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md @@ -186,6 +186,6 @@ For example, the open syscall opens a file and returns the responsible file desc [Graphite](https://graphiteapp.org) [Memory mapped I/O](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory-mapped_I/O) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md b/gemfeed/2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md index f223f750..8957ffd6 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md @@ -103,6 +103,6 @@ Mimecast highly encourages you to have a look at DTail and submit an issue for a [https://dtail.dev](https://dtail.dev) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md b/gemfeed/2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md index c4becd6f..97b968a3 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Have you reached this article already via Gemini? It requires a Gemini client; web browsers such as Firefox, Chrome, Safari, etc., don't support the Gemini protocol. The Gemini address of this site (or the address of this capsule as people say in Geminispace) is: -[gemini://snonux.de](gemini://snonux.de) +[gemini://foo.surf](gemini://foo.surf) However, if you still use HTTP, you are just surfing the fallback HTML version of this capsule. In that case, I suggest reading on what this is all about :-). @@ -76,6 +76,6 @@ Check out one of the following links for more information about Gemini. For exam [gemini://gemini.circumlunar.space](gemini://gemini.circumlunar.space) [https://gemini.circumlunar.space](https://gemini.circumlunar.space) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md b/gemfeed/2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md index d53f3052..2aca450f 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md @@ -380,6 +380,6 @@ I also highly recommend having a read through the "Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide [Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide](https://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md b/gemfeed/2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md index 2600b408..dbc834f7 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md @@ -166,6 +166,6 @@ It was quite a lot of fun writing Gemtexter. It's a relatively small project, bu I finally revamped my personal internet site and started to blog again. I wanted the result to be exactly how it is now: A slightly retro-inspired internet site built for fun with unconventional tools. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md b/gemfeed/2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md index ce39a2e5..d19e1715 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md @@ -102,6 +102,6 @@ I liked this book so much so that I even bought myself a (used) paper copy of it Will I abandon my beloved Perl? Probably not. There are also some Perl scripts I use at work. But unfortunately I only have a limited amount of time and I have to use it wisely. I might look into Raku (formerly known as Perl 6) next year and use it for a personal pet project, who knows. :-). I also highly recommend reading the two Perl books "Modern Perl" and "Higher-Order Perl". -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md b/gemfeed/2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md index e95254ad..b546dbc3 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md @@ -108,6 +108,6 @@ Should you be pedantic about open-source software? It depends. It depends on you You have better chances when you know how to manage your own server and install and manage alternatives to the big cloud providers by yourself. I have the advantage that I have work experience as a Linux Systems Administrator here. I mentioned NextCloud already. I use NextCloud for online photo and file storage, contact and calendar sync and as an RSS news feed server. You could do the same with your own E-Mail server, you can also host your own website and blog. I also mentioned Matrix as a Skype alternative (which could also be an alternative to WhatsApp, Skype, Telegram, Viber, ...). I don't know a lot about Matrix yet, but it seems to be a very neat alternative. I am ready to invest time in it as one of my future personal pet projects. Not only because I think it's better, but also because for fun and as a hobby. But this doesn't mean that I invest *all* of my personal free time in it. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md b/gemfeed/2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md index fd4d3dbb..1bfea77f 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md @@ -87,6 +87,6 @@ Not to mention, keeping things simple and stupid also reduces the potential mali There is, however, a trap. The more you spend time with things, the more these things feel natural to you and you become an expert. The more you become an expert, the more you introduce more abstractions and other clever ways of doing things. For you, things seem to be KISS still, but another person may not be an expert and might not understand what you do. One of the fundamental challenges is to keep things really KISS. You might add abstraction upon abstraction to a system and don't even notice it until it is too late. -Enough ranted for now :-). E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +Enough ranted for now :-). E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md b/gemfeed/2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md index 260f88f2..e4e97028 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md @@ -99,6 +99,6 @@ For every major incident, you need to follow up with an incident retrospective. This usually means creating one or more tickets, which will be dealt with soon. Once the permanent fix is deployed, you can remove your ad-hoc automation and monitoring around it and focus on your regular work again. -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md b/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md index d30a49a5..1bdc4452 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md @@ -280,10 +280,10 @@ Let's walk through all three examples from the above snippet: * The second pipes "Hello world" via stdout to stdin of the "cat" command. As cat's argument is "-" it reads its data from stdin and not from a regular file named "-". So "-" has a special meaning for cat. * The third and fourth examples are interesting as we don't use a pipe as of "|" but a so-called HERE-document and a HERE-string. But the end results are the same. -The "tar" command understands "-" too. The following example tars up some local directory and sends the data to stdout (this is what "-f -" commands it to do). stdout then is piped via an SSH session to a remote tar process (running on snonux.de) and reads the data from stdin and extracts all the data coming from stdin (as we told tar with "-f -") on the remote machine: +The "tar" command understands "-" too. The following example tars up some local directory and sends the data to stdout (this is what "-f -" commands it to do). stdout then is piped via an SSH session to a remote tar process (running on buetow.org) and reads the data from stdin and extracts all the data coming from stdin (as we told tar with "-f -") on the remote machine: ``` -❯ tar -czf - /some/dir | ssh hercules@snonux.de tar -xzvf - +❯ tar -czf - /some/dir | ssh hercules@buetow.org tar -xzvf - ``` This is yet another example of using "-", but this time using the "file" command: @@ -461,6 +461,6 @@ In the Bash you will have to fall back to an external command like "bc" (the arb .10 ``` -See you later for the next post of this series. E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +See you later for the next post of this series. E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md b/gemfeed/2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md index cfecbd15..6fae8000 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md +++ b/gemfeed/2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md @@ -123,6 +123,6 @@ Another blog post worth reading: [https://unixsheikh.com/articles/how-to-stay-sane-in-todays-world-of-tech.html](https://unixsheikh.com/articles/how-to-stay-sane-in-todays-world-of-tech.html) -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md b/gemfeed/2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md index 7f1ad340..c0a34fb6 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md +++ b/gemfeed/2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md @@ -481,6 +481,6 @@ To change this behaviour, pipefile can be used. Now, the pipes exit status is 1 1 ``` -E-Mail me your comments to snonux@snonux.de! +E-Mail me your comments to paul at buetow dot org! [Go back to the main site](../) diff --git a/gemfeed/index.md b/gemfeed/index.md index 32dc5bac..6877c6f9 100644 --- a/gemfeed/index.md +++ b/gemfeed/index.md @@ -1,29 +1,29 @@ -# snonux.de's Gemfeed +# foo.surf's Gemfeed ## Having fun with computers! -[2022-01-01 (1134 words) - Bash Golf Part 2](./2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md) -[2021-12-26 (2275 words) - How to stay sane as a DevOps person ](./2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md) -[2021-11-29 (1281 words) - Bash Golf Part 1](./2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md) -[2021-10-22 (2276 words) - Defensive DevOps](./2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md) -[2021-09-12 (1365 words) - Keep it simple and stupid](./2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md) -[2021-08-01 (2919 words) - On being Pedantic about Open-Source](./2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md) -[2021-07-04 (2048 words) - The Well-Grounded Rubyist](./2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md) -[2021-06-05 (1191 words) - Gemtexter - One Bash script to rule it all](./2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md) -[2021-05-16 (1717 words) - Personal Bash coding style guide](./2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md) -[2021-04-24 (0797 words) - Welcome to the Geminispace](./2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md) -[2021-04-22 (2117 words) - DTail - The distributed log tail program](./2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md) -[2018-06-01 (2171 words) - Realistic load testing with I/O Riot for Linux](./2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md) -[2016-11-20 (0314 words) - Methods in C](./2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md) -[2016-05-22 (0508 words) - Spinning up my own authoritative DNS servers](./2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md) -[2016-04-16 (0244 words) - Offsite backup with ZFS (Part 2)](./2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md) -[2016-04-09 (0421 words) - Jails and ZFS with Puppet on FreeBSD](./2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md) -[2016-04-03 (0594 words) - Offsite backup with ZFS](./2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md) -[2015-12-05 (0339 words) - Run Debian on your phone with Debroid](./2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md) -[2014-03-24 (0132 words) - The fibonacci.pl.c Polyglot](./2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md) -[2011-05-07 (0399 words) - Perl Daemon (Service Framework)](./2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md) -[2010-05-09 (1272 words) - The Fype Programming Language](./2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md) -[2010-05-07 (0192 words) - Lazy Evaluation with Standard ML](./2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md) -[2010-04-09 (0266 words) - Standard ML and Haskell](./2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md) -[2008-12-29 (0294 words) - Using my Nokia N95 for fixing my MTA](./2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md) -[2008-06-26 (0147 words) - Perl Poetry](./2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md) +[2022-01-01 (1138 words) - Bash Golf Part 2](./2022-01-01-bash-golf-part-2.md) +[2021-12-26 (2279 words) - How to stay sane as a DevOps person ](./2021-12-26-how-to-stay-sane-as-a-devops-person.md) +[2021-11-29 (1285 words) - Bash Golf Part 1](./2021-11-29-bash-golf-part-1.md) +[2021-10-22 (2280 words) - Defensive DevOps](./2021-10-22-defensive-devops.md) +[2021-09-12 (1369 words) - Keep it simple and stupid](./2021-09-12-keep-it-simple-and-stupid.md) +[2021-08-01 (2923 words) - On being Pedantic about Open-Source](./2021-08-01-on-being-pedantic-about-open-source.md) +[2021-07-04 (2052 words) - The Well-Grounded Rubyist](./2021-07-04-the-well-grounded-rubyist.md) +[2021-06-05 (1195 words) - Gemtexter - One Bash script to rule it all](./2021-06-05-gemtexter-one-bash-script-to-rule-it-all.md) +[2021-05-16 (1721 words) - Personal Bash coding style guide](./2021-05-16-personal-bash-coding-style-guide.md) +[2021-04-24 (0801 words) - Welcome to the Geminispace](./2021-04-24-welcome-to-the-geminispace.md) +[2021-04-22 (2121 words) - DTail - The distributed log tail program](./2021-04-22-dtail-the-distributed-log-tail-program.md) +[2018-06-01 (2175 words) - Realistic load testing with I/O Riot for Linux](./2018-06-01-realistic-load-testing-with-ioriot-for-linux.md) +[2016-11-20 (0318 words) - Methods in C](./2016-11-20-methods-in-c.md) +[2016-05-22 (0512 words) - Spinning up my own authoritative DNS servers](./2016-05-22-spinning-up-my-own-authoritative-dns-servers.md) +[2016-04-16 (0248 words) - Offsite backup with ZFS (Part 2)](./2016-04-16-offsite-backup-with-zfs-part2.md) +[2016-04-09 (0425 words) - Jails and ZFS with Puppet on FreeBSD](./2016-04-09-jails-and-zfs-on-freebsd-with-puppet.md) +[2016-04-03 (0598 words) - Offsite backup with ZFS](./2016-04-03-offsite-backup-with-zfs.md) +[2015-12-05 (0343 words) - Run Debian on your phone with Debroid](./2015-12-05-run-debian-on-your-phone-with-debroid.md) +[2014-03-24 (0136 words) - The fibonacci.pl.c Polyglot](./2014-03-24-the-fibonacci.pl.c-polyglot.md) +[2011-05-07 (0403 words) - Perl Daemon (Service Framework)](./2011-05-07-perl-daemon-service-framework.md) +[2010-05-09 (1276 words) - The Fype Programming Language](./2010-05-09-the-fype-programming-language.md) +[2010-05-07 (0196 words) - Lazy Evaluation with Standard ML](./2010-05-07-lazy-evaluation-with-standarn-ml.md) +[2010-04-09 (0270 words) - Standard ML and Haskell](./2010-04-09-standard-ml-and-haskell.md) +[2008-12-29 (0298 words) - Using my Nokia N95 for fixing my MTA](./2008-12-29-using-my-nokia-n95-for-fixing-my-mta.md) +[2008-06-26 (0151 words) - Perl Poetry](./2008-06-26-perl-poetry.md) @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# +# foo.surf ``` ,---------------------------, diff --git a/other-resources.md b/other-resources.md index 10a8e19a..55de99a2 100644 --- a/other-resources.md +++ b/other-resources.md @@ -76,6 +76,6 @@ _-" . ' + . . ,//////0\ | /00HHHHHHHMMMMM * 2004 - Absolution Gap (en) / Offenbarung (de) - Revelation Space Universe, Alastair Reynolds * 2019 - Eklipse (de), Andreas Brandhorst -Do you recommend a good Science Fiction Novel? E-Mail at snonux@snonux.de! :-) +Do you recommend a good Science Fiction Novel? E-Mail at paul at buetow dot org! :-) [Go back to the main site](./) diff --git a/site-mirrors.md b/site-mirrors.md index 1549d8d4..c2abd2c5 100644 --- a/site-mirrors.md +++ b/site-mirrors.md @@ -2,16 +2,13 @@ This page attempts to summarize all the mirrors of this site. Agreeably, that's all a bit overkill (given the importance of this internet presence), but I did it for fun. -I could not decide which host to use for my site (buetow.org or snonux.de), so I decided just to use both. Both hosts are pointing to the same content. - All sites listed below are reachable via IPv4 and also via IPv6. ## My Gemini capsule ### Germany -[gemini://snonux.de - My internet site and blog](gemini://snonux.de) -[gemini://buetow.org - Alias for above](gemini://buetow.org) +[gemini://foo.surf - My internet site and blog](gemini://foo.surf) Wondering what's the Gemini protocol about? Read: @@ -21,8 +18,7 @@ Wondering what's the Gemini protocol about? Read: The addresses above are hosted in Germany. Alternatively, you can add a "www" for using a mirror in Japan: -[gemini://www.snonux.de](gemini://www.snonux.de) -[gemini://www.buetow.org](gemini://www.buetow.org) +[gemini://www.foo.surf](gemini://www.foo.surf) ## My website @@ -30,20 +26,17 @@ The addresses above are hosted in Germany. Alternatively, you can add a "www" fo The content is the same as the Gemini capsule, but reachable via HTTP+HTML: -[https://snonux.de - My internet website and blog](https://snonux.de) -[https://buetow.org - Alias for above](https://buetow.org) +[https://foo.surf - My internet website and blog](https://foo.surf) Just because I can, here are additional mirrors hosted on Codeberg as Codeberg pages: -[https://www2.snonux.de](https://www2.snonux.de) -[https://www2.buetow.org](https://www2.buetow.org) +[https://www2.foo.surf](https://www2.foo.surf) ### Japan The addresses above are hosted in Germany. Alternatively, you can add a "www" for a mirror in Japan: -[https://www.snonux.de](https://www.snonux.de) -[https://www.buetow.org](https://www.buetow.org) +[https://www.foo.surf](https://www.foo.surf) That's all for now... |
