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MacAdmins Podcast 187: Macsysadmin, The Show Must Go On
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Jamf After Dark: Product Owning
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MacAdmins Episode 186: Adobe Packaging in 2020 with Daz Wallace
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The Troubled History Of Voting Machines
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Starting A Company Podcast
Wrote a post on how to start a podcast within a company at https://www.bootstrappers.mn/post/starting-a-company-podcast. It starts off: The first time we do most things is usually the hardest. Once we get through one or two repetitions, most tasks get easier. About 400 podcast episodes in I’ve had a lot of failures that maybe just maybe anyone reading this article can avoid. So first, let’s look at why organizations make podcasts: If it’s your cup of tea, read more at https://www.bootstrappers.mn/post/starting-a-company-podcast.
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The Intergalactic Memo That Was The Seed Of The Internet
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MacAdmins Episode 185: The MSP Toolchain with Ryan Grimes
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Macsysadmin 2020 Keynote Deck
I’ve decided that it would be awesome if anyone took any of my works and built on top of them. So I’m including the raw keynote deck and the pdf of the deck for my Macsysadmin talk this year. Please feel free to use the raw deck without attribution. No copyright or copyleft or any of that involved. <3
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Kubectl: Echo and Check
After a virtual machine is provisioned and booted, we can echo the server and check that the cluster is deployed properly. Here, we’ll use a yaml file called kube_cluster_config604.yml (but your name may be different). That file should be in the directory with the cloned repo. We’ll kick it off with the kubectl binary. First, we’ll run a simple kubectl defining the –kubeconfig and then the yml file and apply a command that is an echo.yml (to see an example of that, check out( https://github.com/spinnaker/echo/blob/master/echo-web/config/echo.yml): kubectl --kubeconfig kube_cluster_config604.yml apply -f echo.yml We can then check the deployment using a get verb followed by pod, deployment, ingress, and sac: kubectl --kubeconfig…