Kukkani kotinatu kodtadu with proofs
What a Man
Open cheque offer iche richest party of India BJP side veli undachu
Kani he never took that offer
Because Money is not everything
24 lo NDA pant tight avadaniki one of the main reason
29 varuku complete ga battalu oodatestadu
Best Platform research chesa Remote Work Facility
Bhayya Miku Skills Vuntey Earning Osthadhi 🙌
If you want a link Drop Comment and Retweet must
Only my Followers will Get this Link
Nani Anna,
Nuvvu "Ni istam Srikanth" ani anna prathisari I hear "I trust you Srikanth"
And that trust scares me, every single second to give my blood and soul to The Paradise.
I broke your every rule of cinema.
I broke your working days pattern...
I broke your release date streak...
I broke your working style...
I almost broke every rule of you 'making of cinema'
Each time I broke you, you built me anna...
You built me in a way that everything i have today is because of you. Nuv namminatha nannu evaru nammaledu anna.
I asked you to wear braids....you said "ok ra ni istam"
I asked you to wear a slur as a tattoo on your hand...you said "ok ra ni istam"
I torture you everyday with countless retakes... you simply say - "ok ra ni istam"
I never said this to you directly but now I should confess anna.
I spend every second of my life by constantly chasing the answer to why you always say "Ni istam Srikanth"
And maybe, subconscious I will find my own answer with THE PARADISE.
Nannu nammina na Dharani ki,
Nannu malli nammuthunna na Jadal ki...
Happy Birthday Nani Anna ❤️
Indebted for life time❤️❤️❤️
Both are sukumar films , Both are emotional scenes.. yedhi natural undho easy ga telsipothundi
Innalu base voice eskoni gattiga ariste acting ani ruddhi dengaru 🤦
Shell scripting is the one skill that separates DevOps engineers who panic during incidents from those who fix them in minutes.
I spent 8 years in Linux before I got into DevOps.
I wrote a minimalistic ebook on Linux shell scripting that will give you enough knowledge to start writing any shell scripts
I'm giving it away for free.
Follow me + retweet + comment "Living devops" and I'll send you the ebook in DM.
When people talk about homelabs, they usually mean physical hardware at home. But for most learning scenarios, renting a few remote VMs (VPS, cloud instances, droplets, etc.) gets you surprisingly far.
With a handful of VMs, you can do pretty much the same things a typical homelab is used for:
- Run Docker and Kubernetes
- Build multi-node setups
- Experiment with networking, storage, and system-level tooling
- Break things, rebuild them, automate everything
The setup is different (remote servers instead of a physical box in your basement), but the learning experience is largely equivalent. You still SSH in, configure machines, wire them together, and debug real systems.
iximiuz Labs Playgrounds are built around the same idea. They're real VMs, not containers or simulated sandboxes. You can do the same things you'd do on EC2, DigitalOcean, or a box under your desk: Docker, Kubernetes, Cilium/Tetragon, multiple disks, private networks, multi-node topologies - all of it.
For learning and experimentation purposes, iximiuz Labs Playgrounds can actually be even handier than both homelabs and generic VM providers:
- No hardware to buy, host, or maintain (and I'm personally very afraid of my lab catching a fire while I'm away)
- No paying for machines while you're not using them - playgrounds can be paused and resumed
- Spinning up or cloning environments takes seconds, not evenings
- Multi-node labs are trivial and much cheaper without juggling multiple VPS servers or cloud instances
But most importantly, iximiuz Labs lowers the barrier to experimenting. When environments are easy to create and easy to throw away, you try more things, break more setups, and learn faster.
If you like the idea of a homelab but prefer something lighter and more disposable, this may be a very natural alternative. Check it out https://t.co/x9Q3BQUIK8
Steve Smith hits a risk-free six, spots too many fielders outside the circle, and immediately informs the umpire. That’s a cricketing brain on another level🤯🤯🔥🔥
Solid fundamentals and hands-on experience now matter more than ever. With Claude Code and similar tools, I'm now building things x2-5 faster, but AI (agents or not) can also be a massive footgun.
Without gut feeling, good design taste, and being able to call out bullshit, you can easily get stuck going in circles and/or end up with a brittle codebase, infrastructure setup, or whatever it is you're building.
And no, AI won't help you fix it. The tech debt introduced by mindless AI use can't be fixed with more AI use. Someone will have to direct it, and such specialists will only become more valuable as agents become more capable.
My advice is that if you want to stay relevant as a developer, DevOps engineer, or SRE, get as much hands-on experience as you can and always dig down to fundamentals - Linux, networking, distributed systems principles, etc. Funnily enough, this has always been a winning tactic.
And make sure your reliance on agents is inversely proportional to your domain experience. In particular, it means that juniors shouldn't skip the "build it with your own hands" phase - the same way kids in schools don't skip arithmetic with pen and paper, despite calculators having been around for ages.
Happy hacking!