Odds are security is not able to fight this fight.
The MSA with Microsoft will say something along the lines of data will not leave the corporate boundary. And that will be sufficient - because Microsoft has assumed the risk.
Odds are security is not able to fight this fight.
The MSA with Microsoft will say something along the lines of data will not leave the corporate boundary. And that will be sufficient - because Microsoft has assumed the risk.
I or others can go into more detail, but I'm guessing you do not want a super in depth answer?
One of the major cloud providers (aka renting a chunk of a data center) has a outage in the us-east-1 region. Because of internal dependencies on us-east-1, when that AWS region (aka data center) has problems it impacts service's across all AWS regions. To end users, suddenly web sites will act strange, crash, or just not work as elements of their backend are having problems. Due to the raw size of AWS, when something like this happens vast swaths of the web will break.
For highly technical users containers are going to do everything we need.
For non technical users who need separation, profiles are a standard known framework.
Depends on seat count. But even a "small" (the smallest bucket of seats is 500) on prem install of data center/confluence can be in 6 figures...
Hell. I'll echo that but for senor operations types. Your who im looking for if you can function in 3+ different operating systems, understand (and can implement) dnssec, and design gitops workflows. Bonus points if you can explain SMTP to me.
Trillium Next: The last note taking software you will ever need. It works as a standalone, or in a client/server configuration across almost all platforms.
Only allowed to use if your hostname is Epsilon3. And instead of systemd you get TheGreatMachine.
I get it. But the moment we invoke RAID, or ZFS, we are outside what standard consumers will ever interact with, and therefore into business use cases. Remember, even simple homelab use cases involving docker are well past what the bulk of the world understands.
There is an enterprise storage shelf (aka a bunch of drives that hooks up to a server) made by Dell which is 1.2 PB (yes petabytes). So there is a use, but it's not for consumers.
Not op but I'll do stuff from time to time that is well below my pay grade. Mind management understands that the pay difference and that I'm not doing my normal responsibilities if I'm helping out...
See I just like LMDE. Everything works without fiddling (I want my OS to be boring). And if I feel spicy - backports.
If you can, get a Linux work machine. In lue of that get a Mac.
If you can't do either, buckle up cause it's gonna get real bumpy