today's leftovers
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TDengine Brings Open Source Time-Series Database to Kubernetes
TDengine today made available an update to its namesake open source time-series database so that it can now run on Kubernetes clusters.
TDengine CEO Jeff Tao says TDengine 3.0 is differentiated from other time-series databases in that it includes caching and streaming processing capabilities along with support for SQL and an ability to subscribe to data in a way that simplifies operations.
TDengine is also integrated with a range of analytics and observability tools including Grafana, Google Data Studio and Prometheus, Tao says. Features such as super tables, storage and compute separation, data partitioning by time interval and pre-computation make it easy to access data in a highly efficient manner, says Tao.
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Evoluso offers operations system installation services at a very reasonable rate [Ed: This is full of falsehoods actually]
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New on FOSS Force: Check Out Our Calendar of Open Source Events
It started about six months ago when we changed the theme that gives our site its look and feel, which happened because the developer of the theme we’d been using since our start in 2010 quit supporting it, meaning it was time to move on for security reasons.
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How Firefox’s Total Cookie Protection and container extensions work together
When we recently announced the full public roll-out of Firefox Total Cookie Protection — a new default browser feature that automatically confines cookies to the websites that created them, thus eliminating the most common method that sites use to track you around the web — it raised a question: Do container extensions like Mozilla’s Facebook Container and Multi-Account Containers still serve a purpose, since they similarly perform anti-tracking functions by suppressing cookie trails?
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But with a container extension, you can isolate cookies even within parts or pages of the same domain. You could have Gmail open in one container tab and Google Shopping and News in other containers (for instance, under different accounts) and Google will be oblivious to their relation.
Beyond this added privacy protection, container extensions are most useful as an easy means of separating different parts of your online life (e.g. personal, work) within the same browser.
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Elevate Your Organization’s Open Source Strategy [Ed: 'Linux' Foundation is pushing proprietary software controlled by Microsoft. This is clearly an abuse of the brand and breach of the mission.]
Through the LFX Individual Dashboard, participants can register the identity they are using to contribute their code to GitHub and Gerrit (Since the Hyperledger project uses both).