Last night we played MechWarrior: Online.
Here are the highlights from the 2.5 hours of gameplay!
1) Surprise Blaps!
2) Flanking 101!
Enjoy! 😀
Last night we played MechWarrior: Online.
Here are the highlights from the 2.5 hours of gameplay!
1) Surprise Blaps!
2) Flanking 101!
Enjoy! 😀
So let me get this straight.
This girl is 16 years old. Gets shot IN THE HEAD. Goes on to become an activist at the UN demanding mandatory education for children around the world. Has a day named after her.
And I’m just sitting here eating Frosted Flakes and playing Eve.
Frak. Frakity frak. I need to do something with my life.
Yeah. It’s like that.
Unless something goes horrifically wrong.
Like it did to today.
But more on that later.
So, we’re looking to change over to Web Help Desk at work and we got a very handy OVA file for VMWare and got it up and running.
Let me start by saying: Web Help Desk is pretty slick. Very full-featured, seems to be extensible, mobile friendly, email for creation/comment/take tickets.
I was initially looking at RT and even ZenDesk, but we went with Web Help Desk at the end of the day.
However, there is only part we got stuck at, and I’m still waiting to hear back from their support department: getting our certificate added to the web server to make it a SSL site.
For the life of them, they couldn’t figure out or find documentation on how to convert our wildcard PFX/PKC12 certificate over to the Tomcat (JKS) keystore. As I recall they said “Getting this done in Windows is very easy, but most people who do choose the Linux version already know how to do this.” Well isn’t that marvelous. We don’t. Do you want us to buy your product or not? We’re still waiting to hear back, but we figured it out. Here’s the guide for you, just in case.
Reposted from JAMF Nation
keytool -v -list -storetype pkcs12
-keystore yourkeyfilename.extension
keytool -importkeystore -srckeystore yourkeyfilename.extension
-srcstoretype pkcs12 -srcalias thealias -destkeystore newkeystorefile.jks
-deststoretype jks -deststorepass apassword -destalias tomcat
Notes: You don’t need to supply a password. I didn’t. The destalias can be required to be something by whatever program you’re plugging into. For me it was tomcat. srcalias is the alias from step 4.
Thanks to Nick Koval (nkoval) for the fix.