Hello Gary-
I meant no harm in my comment. It was all sarcasm. You actually retired at
the right time and it's better to stay busy when retired. If you don't use
it you will lose it. I have mixed emotions about getting old. I was let go
because of my age recently after 24 years on the job, and it has me
thinking about what I want to do for the remainder of my life. I can either
be a cynic or try to make the best of it. It depends on how I feel I guess.
I'm 54 and trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow up. BTW fix
your damn boat so Brian can fly us to your boat and then we can go cruise
the bay. :)
Keivn
On Sat, Mar 15, 2025 at 9:42 AM Gary <saclug(a)garymcglinn.com> wrote:
That put a smile on my face. Now where are my glasses
LOL?
This is the 21st Century. They told me everything would be easy and I'd
have a flying car.
I'm disappointed :)
I'll give your suggestion a try.
I'm trying to simplify my life. It's hard to do when they keep making you
spend time 'cause they redo things that already work just fine. Just
sayin'.
I wish someone would say something nice about the 22nd Century. I mean,
something beside we'll all be underwater and the seas will be boiling.
Like maybe that I'll have a flying car and everything will be easy!
It's nice to have something to look forward to.
On a more serious note, I've been wondering if there is some SOAP effect
here. The actual framework/protocol is easy, but the tools make it hard.
It seemed really messed up that things want multiuser target and there is
no target after that. So, that if you need to run after something that
wants multiuser, you have to do an after. I was looking into trying to
define a target after everything runs and then just have my unit want or
requre that.
I'm still learning this stuff. Old retired people can't learn either.
Better to just put them on the porch. Your solution sounds easier, but
with some subtleties. Retired people are always talking abut the past and
how good it was. Makes people feel like they are hearing old Soviet
propaganda. Oh, that's right, you have no idea what that is like LOL.
This is the best of all possible worlds---Dr. Pangloss. --My sides hurt.
It's difficult being old and sick and stupid and a drag on society. What
was I before? Oh yea, I saved more money than I earned. Wait, that kinda
sounds like a drag on things. Keynes thought so. Oh that's right, I almost
forgot (old people are always forgetting things) he's wrong. We still use
his ideas (I can tell because I remember...), we just call them different
things. I'm confused. But now, I spend more money than I earn. I must
have things backward.
Apparently having someone serve you food in a restaurant is good for the
economy. But having someone serve you food in a "retirement community" is
a drag on society because that person could be serving someone food in a
restaurant.
I'm so confused. Must be because I'm old and retired.
It's hard being old and stupid and not doing what I'm told.
I have a nice seat on my front porch. Maybe it will be sunny later.
--Just having some fun with my morning coffee :)
n Fri, Mar 14, 2025 at 07:34:18PM -0000, Kevin B wrote:
Gary, computers are hard and shouldn't be
used by retired folks. :) Run
it like below, it will load last. Use AI for docs -
much easier and faster
than our brains.
Type=idle
Behavior of idle is very similar to simple; however, actual execution of
the
service program is delayed until all active jobs are dispatched. This
may be used to avoid interleaving the output of shell services with the
status output on the console. Note that this type is useful only to improve
console output, it is not useful as a general unit ordering tool, and the
effect of this service type is subject to a 5s timeout, after which the
service program is invoked anyway.
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/latest/systemd.service.html
Kevin
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