I just ran into this issue after recently disabling IPv6 on my machines, a fix is to add "AddressFamily inet" to the /etc/ssh/sshd_config file and reload the ssh service.
I used Bard after trying unsuccessfully to decipher the wikipedia page and Bard says, according to IEEE 754, nan < nan should return false (0); while nan > nan should return false (0)
I wish there was some version of Wikipedia for people who speak good English (not Simple English), but aren't assumed to already be experts on the topic. Technical articles are pretty much impenetrable.
So you basically wish for Wikipedia to also feature simplified explanations of technical topics.
I don't think "good English vs simple english" plays into this.
It's not like the problem for technical articles being impenetratable on Wiki is that Wiki doesn't have an intermediate level between expert-talk and simple english.
It's just that it doesn't have simple english explanations of some technical topics.
I've never used ansible but the article makes me want to consider trying it on my self hosted stuff. I wish I had that article years and years ago, the inclusion of how to configure virtual accounts for email is especially useful to anyone starting out.
"In order to deliver email to other mail providers without being marked as spam, I ideally needed to implement all three policy frameworks with the mail server."
Then a few lines later:
"Inbound and outbound message delivery was working."
"Isoleucine participates in hemoglobin synthesis, as well as in the regulation of blood sugar and energy levels. Studies revealed that this amino acid has a very low toxicity at pharmatological levels up to 8% of solution concentration in rats."
"As a matter of fact, the three amino acids (Isoleucine, Leucine, and Valine) constitute nearly 70% of all the amino acids in the body's proteins. That is why their value in human body is so high."
Docker images can still have a drift in layer delta if one would not pin system package versioning of the applications being installed, even if the instructions to generate those layers remain the same.
The output being an image does not make all iterations of those instructions the same thing.