Also known as: “Patch and Pray Day, Episode 547.” It’s that beautiful time of the month again — Update Tuesday, when Microsoft releases patches and every IT person in the world holds their breath, clutches their backup drives, and whispers, “Please don’t kill the printer again…” And me? I’m over here with my usual Tuesday vibe:One eye on the update
Category: Operating Systems
Let’s be clear — I only ghost people, not operating systems. So here’s what’s up:Lately, I’ve been knee-deep in Azure labs, spinning up Windows VMs, and scripting things in PowerShell like a proper government IT guy. And suddenly people are like: “Bro… are you leaving Ubuntu?”“You okay? You’ve been talking about Microsoft a lot.” Relax. I’m not abandoning Ubuntu. I’m
(One Terminal Window to Rule Them All) Okay, real talk—I’m on this long, chaotic, caffeine-fueled journey to become a network and cybersecurity engineer. You know, the type of person who dreams in IP ranges and sets up firewalls for fun. But somewhere along the way, I hit this major fork in the command-line road:Do I focus on being a Windows
Let’s face it: learning tech is like trying to teach a cat to use a printer. It’s chaotic, confusing, and occasionally the printer catches fire (metaphorically… we hope). But if you’re a brave soul venturing into the wild world of Linux, cybersecurity, networking, or just want to run five operating systems at once like some kind of digital wizard—VirtualBox is
I love Ubuntu. I really do. It’s fast, it’s free, it respects my privacy, and it doesn’t randomly reboot to update itself in the middle of a Zoom meeting. But then one day I dared—dared!—to do the unthinkable:I tried to write a document. And just like that, my honeymoon with Linux ended with a thud loud enough to crash Nautilus.
Let me tell you about my on-again, off-again, therapy-worthy relationship with Ubuntu Linux. It’s like being with someone super smart, mysterious, kind of hot (in a nerdy way), but also emotionally unavailable and occasionally deletes your stuff without warning. At First, It Was All Butterflies and Bash The first time I installed Ubuntu, I felt like I’d joined a secret