#automation

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I'm working on a cheat sheet for . This nifty tool is easily overlooked, but so powerful that it really made me invest more time into learning it.

The initial version of the cheat sheet is available and ready for feedback: https://linux-audit.com/cheat-sheets/awk/

Boosts would be appreciated, and feedback even more!

What are your AWK one-liners that others really need to know and should be included?

Special thanks to @DopeGhoti

Hola gente maja! Me dedico a (javera) aunque toco y , llevo dos años en el sector y quisiera aprender toooooooodo lo que pueda y un poco mas.

Adoro el cine, la música...en fin, la cultura en general.

Ando algo perdida por aquí y me gustaría poder contactar/seguir a personas que aporten conocimiento y alegría a mí mundo (intentaré hacer lo mismo).

¿A quién recomendáis? Gracias!!💜

Today in Labor History March 11, 1811: Luddites attacked looms near Nottingham, England, because automation was threatening their jobs. At the time, workers were suffering from high unemployment, declining wages, an “endless” war with France and food scarcity. On March 11, they smashed machines in Nottingham and demonstrated for job security and higher wages. The protests and property destruction spread across a 70-mile area of England, reaching Manchester. The government sent troops to protect the factories and made machine-breaking punishable by death.

Robert Elliott Smith: Rage Inside the Machine (2019, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc) No rating

We live in a world increasingly ruled by technology; we seem as governed by technology …

Algorithms that divide complex human capabilities into simplified features are not only a catalyst for dehumanization, they are the mechanism that causes it. To overcome this, we need to think again about Al's role in the economy and society from the point of view of the welfare of humanity rather than the overriding efficiency of the machine.

Rage Inside the Machine by  (Page 149)