So starting a new job means amongst many other (far more important) things, setting up your new work computer.
If you get the chance to speak to anyone from this team at VMworld, your local VMUG, etc, then ask them why and take the time to listen carefully. Trust me, if you’re an architect or engineer responsible for designing and/or implementing VMware solutions in your datacenter, then the technology this team is working on will have a material impact on how you do what you do in the next couple of years. I’m sure I’ll be writing some articles here about what we’re up to in the coming months. There’s lots of super interesting work going on there, and very cool, smart folks to learn from. I’ve joined VMware’s Validated Design team within the Integrated Systems business unit as one of their product managers. Yes, I’ve moved on from Coho Data (an awesome scale-out, high performance, high-bandwidth enabled, distributed, shared nothing, enterprise-class, freakishly good storage product – give them a call if you have storage needs for VMware, docker images, OpenStack, Big Data, etc). This is a post about Homebrew and Cask, two package management projects for OS X CLI and GUI applications respectively, and why they’re so useful when it comes to setting a new Apple Mac.
#Gpodder android app sd card mac os x
Mac OS X “application installation automation” – now say that 3 times quickly!