Shared Contacts for Gmail enables Google Workspace (G-Suite) & Gmail users to create, manage, share team address books (labels) from anywhere (Gmail, Google Contacts, Mobile phones etc.).
Define access permissions exactly like you would do with a Google Doc: - View Only - Edit - Delete permission - Re-share - Transfer of ownership
Access contacts shared with you from anywhere in your workspace (Gmail, Google Contacts, Calendar, Mobile phones etc.).
See the relevant information of senders and recipients when you compose or receive an email (like with a CRM): - Email, Phone, Company, Job Title - Notes added to the contact - Previous interactions you had with this contact
Shared Contacts for Gmail boosts productivity of all Gmail and Google Workspace, previously known as G Suite, users, by providing a solution to a huge problem that Gmail and Google Workspace do not solve: i.e. the ability to share contacts and contact groups. It will help you to be more effective while collaborating in real-time.
Shared Contacts for Gmail is built to enhance your Gmail, Google Contacts, Google Drive, Calendar, your mobile contacts app etc. to include contact sharing features without need to use a third party tool.
It offers a 15-Day Free Trial [no CC required] to try and see how it can help your team in improving your business.
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The best starting points for this would be the iproute2 man page [1], superuser [2] and serverfault [3]. There are potentially also Linux namespaces to consider. There are also some youtube videos that can walk you through the 'ip' command and debugging routes. Start with "debug route linux iproute2" in their search. That's a topic probably too big for HN I think. [1] -... - Source: Hacker News / 12 months ago
See the link to serverfault.com above, that seems the closest advice so far but too early to tell. Source: over 1 year ago
I would but the guys here are a bit lazy so I thought of a script - this is from serverfault.com so I need to change the security descriptor to modify. Source: over 1 year ago
Fundamentally, "dev" and "ops" require different skillsets. Dev experience does not translate to ops. An experienced "ops" might be able to rootcause an issue by pattern matching its markers to previous experience. A green "dev" is just that, green, and will usually operate with the handicap of a huge learning curve ahead. Sites like https://serverfault.com make it a bit easier to poke around, but are not a... - Source: Hacker News / almost 2 years ago
Well, there is https://serverfault.com/ for that, which uses the same stackexchange engine. Source: almost 2 years ago
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