mercutio: played around with coreos at all? not yet i havent' looked at flocker yet either wonder if i spin up a coreos node if we can run fucking meteor.. ;) hahaha i was using arch when i tried it CoreOS aggregates individual machines into a single pool of resources. Instead of running a service on a specific machine, services are submitted to the cluster and the cluster manager, fleet, decides where they should run. Fleet allows you to gracefully update CoreOS across your cluster, handles machine failures automatically and allows for efficient resource utilization. that is pretty cool yeah i've been looking into it lately https://coreos.com/blog/rocket/ brycebot has gone? i thought it'd give a summary :) he's sleeping oh he's still here it's a container runtime to replace docker, which has sketchy security hmm.. thought coreos was pretty set on docker not to replace it oh i now see their point mercutio: BryceBot only gives summaries for sites for which it knows how to summarise (to put it plainly) brycec: oh, i thought it might take the title or first part of page in general you've taught it about quite a few sites it seems :) mercutio: http://noembed.com/ serves the majority of those summaries (and provides said list) can openbsd 5.6 do virtio now? oh i think it could in 5.5... it has been able to for a while it may have even been 5.4 as far back as when you did the trial vps's ah ok cool which seems to have been in oct 2012 time flies :) dang mercutio: so does news.arpnetworks.com come back up after VM reboot? yeh that's why i rebooted it before. i see someone else commented on it i was just taking another look at the ui atm :) it's amazingly fast ah cool i'm so used to sluggish web applications :) yeah that was my friend francisco i was wondering who that was, they don't irc do they? he's the one that told me about Telescope yesterday ;) nah he's not big into irc what's the intention for this site anyway? are you going to use it like a blog of sorts? mercutio: hosting news from like the industry ahh right since it is reddit-like, i think it may be an interesting source of news. like, if an article sucks, it'll die I feel like somebody is obsessed with thewhir ;p mercutio: you see that Cloudflare is coming to NZ static yes a couple of weeks i think i had some questions about it, but i haven't asked them like are they going to backhaul back to sydney node or go straight to the US etc. and are they going to have transit in nz for non-peering it's a nz guy that was posting about it though who went overseas so he should be pretty familiar with nz :) now if only steam would peer in nz :o surprised they don't i guess they thought australia was close enough dunno nz had a lot of local steam mirrors before they changed their network setup and in australia they're doing a weird agreement with highwinds networks to reduce cost i can't really see them doing anything soon, nor google google don't even have a full deployment in australia, it's more a kind of leaf node. how did you know about it anyway staticsafe ? NZNOG oh you read that? yeah or just happened upon it there's not much activity on it im subbed to all the major NOG lists yeah but it is interesting so you saw all the internet exchange talk? there's one primary internet exchange in new zealand. but suddenly two more are coming yeah saw that exciting times i dunno interesting cloudflare is going to be on all three. valve is only on equinix in sydney. and equinix is generally considered to be on the more expensive side brycec: well, it was a good place to get some test articles fast :) i think it's funny when people keep saying the linux desktop is coming soon mercutio: lol srsly srsly one thing i notice lacking from that article is any mention how the first people to do something new don't usually make much money. i've used Linux on the desktop most of my life, but i'm not going to kid myself. it's never coming to the "desktop" and how doing new things is much riskier with lower reward, but doing things that someone else has already done significantly cheaper can make a huge difference. i kind of find the whole idea of a desktop amusing. i mean apple 2's were considered desktop computers and linux is more friendly than apple 2's whats the difference between domestic origination and domestic backhaul? oh i suppose domestic transit is something foreign to you? domestic backhaul would be i suppose intercity/interstate and domestic origination would be transit links? here there's kind of a split between national/international, kind of akin to paying comcast to send traffic to them. saw a post on AUSNOG saying something about an Australian Dedicated server australia has some really messed up domestic transit costs. it's about 10x as expensive as here i think Softlayer with 1gbit pipe That's what she said!! BryceBot: no Oh, okay... I'm sorry. 'Softlayer with 1gbit pipe' well it varies. like within the same city is cheap, but across the country expensive i seem to recall people throwing around numbers like $20/megabit i haven't seen cheap australian dedicated servers with high bandwidth but from my understanding you'll struggle to get a dedicated server with gigabit network domestically at affordable pricing hmm serversaustralia list gigabit i wonder how fast it goes