No flame intended. Quick question though - out of curiosity: what is specifically your use case for podman?
No flame intended. Quick question though - out of curiosity: what is specifically your use case for podman?
not having to change habits later.
If everybody thought like this, we would still be banging rocks together.
I am not sure about your use case, but IMO learning Docker first would be a good default. It is more wide-spread than podman. If you want (or need) to, moving on to podman would probably not be too big a step.
Judging by your user name, I’ll assume that you speak Dutch. The Heineken factory in Den Bosch is near the Brabanthallen. For context: this is a huge congress hall (or rather: a complex of several halls) that used to be a cattle market. I once went there a few days after a large cattle market. You could still smell the cow piss. To this day I still maintain that it is no coincidence that the Brabanthallen and the Heineken factory are so close to each other. :-)
In Dutch, it just means cat’s asshole.
I was having the same though about Heineken.
In the words of Walter Sobchak:
You are entering a world of pain
I’ll just keep referring it to as Twitter if I ever need to talk about it.
As an 11 year Arch user, I would like to correct the title: “Arch users are the vegans of the computer world”. :-P
And the documentation is great!
I have a four year old Motorola One. The only gripe I have with it , is the poor support for alternative smartphone OS-es.
I simply use Joplin subnotebooks. I have one for home cooking and one for brewing beer. Markdown works well enough for me in terms of portability and readability. It also syncs between my devices, so I have several copies of my recipes.
For home brewing, I have written a few scripts that convert BeerXML to Markdown for easy importing. I create the recipes in my home brewing software (currently Kleiner Brauhelfer), export the BeerXML file and convert it to Markdown for secondary storing.