[00:11] <kenyon> it's bad if you accidentally have multiple default routes and one is provided by DHCP to some router that doesn't actually have Internet access, for example
[12:40] <unixtippse> https://releases.ubuntu.com/jammy/ubuntu-22.04.4-desktop-amd64.iso
[12:40] <unixtippse> https://old-releases.ubuntu.com/releases/jammy/ubuntu-22.04.3-live-server-arm64.iso
[12:40] <unixtippse> Is there any sort of view of the download servers that will provide stable links to ISOs even as they are grandfathered to the "old-releases" URL?
[12:40] <unixtippse> (Sorry should have been amd64 in the second link)
[19:59] <ShadowLabs> Has anyone been abel to get kerberos working wiht tickets longer than 4 hours when connected to an AD environment, ive set my krb5.conf and gpo for longer tickets but showing a klist with the default principal im only seeing a 4 hour expiration and renewal time
[20:13] <kenyon> ShadowLabs: I think the domain policy can override your setting
[20:15] <ShadowLabs> domain policy. is that something different than group policy? I've never heard of it or how to change settings of that 
[20:18] <kenyon> not an AD expert, I just know that from configuring Quest VAS (which is how we join machines to AD domains). I googled https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/security/threat-protection/security-policy-settings/kerberos-policy
[20:20] <ShadowLabs> ya its the same group policy that ive alreadyh set 
[20:22] <ShadowLabs> quest is funny in the manner that they dont use their product in house.
[21:19] <kenyon> not sure if funny or sad
[22:19] <teward> unixtippse: not really, there's different servers holding different data for different reasons, so there's no way to really get one unified download page.
[23:51] <twb> Hey, I'm trying to remember the name of a thing Ubuntu had 10+ years ago for OEM vendors.  You could do a fully-automated install, and then on first boot it'd ask something like "What's the computer's name?  What's the network config?" and then it'd set those up and then uninstall itself.
[23:52] <twb> The idea being that the hardware vendor could pre-install that and the receiving customer would only get prompted for the bare minimum