I've looked a few times over the years but can't find it online. National Archives probably has it somewhere, but not indexed where Google can find it.
Specifically, you seek records related to practical instructions on how to rebuild society after a nuclear war.
We searched our holdings in Record Group 397, Records of the Defense Civil Preparedness Agency. We identified the series External Publications, 1955-1976 which may include records related to your query. A full citation is provided here for your reference:
Record Group 397
Records of the Defense Civil Preparedness Agency
External Publications, 1955-1976
Entry A1 56
Boxes 1 thru 37@ 650/42/30/2
We will be happy to make the records and their finding aids available to you or your representative in the Textual Research Room (Room 2000) here at the National Archives at College Park, Maryland. Please visit our website for information about visiting the National Archives in College Park, MD, including how to schedule a research visit.
(checks list) --Mh, yah so, you've got a point there (scribbles, smiles, extends hand) --Welcome dear Sir or Madam, or, as we will call you, Number Thirteen!
Same here. I’m going to get a new battery soon, so that’ll give me a few more years. I’m hoping something comes along in that time that I want. Otherwise, I may just go to a Japanese eInk phone.
It isn't a phone (no cellular) but the BOOX Palma 2 is a fantastic phone-sized Android-running eInk device. Pair it with a hotspot in your bag or pocket and it would be good enough (as long as you don't make actual calls).
Per the K3s web site and their docs, they don’t call out that it’s good for bare metal production. That tells me it’s not built for heavy workloads, and is instead for dev environments and edge compute.
The default k3s configuration is not scalable which is especially bad for etcd.
Etcd can be replaced with postgres which solves majority of issues, but does require self-management. I've seen k3s clusters with 94 nodes chug away just fine in the default configuration thought.
no they usually start with a bunch of people celebrating something. this holiday is just an underhanded way for liberals to shove their politics down the throats of the other half of the country
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