Even after an additional 100 days of warm storage, a new panel of participants could not reliably distinguish those beers. Surprising many, tasters could not tell those beers apart with any consistency. The presumption here was that filling from the bottom would push any oxygen out of the top of the keg, a claim commonly touted on podcasts, blogs, and internet forums. We first compared a beer gently transferred to a keg through the liquid disconnect from the bottom up to the same beer kegged with intentional (and painful) splashing. Oxidation that occurs after fermentation is complete, referred to as cold-side oxidation, has been the focus of a few of our xBmts. For a chemical element that’s necessary to the existence of so many living organisms, it’s astonishing the havoc oxygen can wreak on beer, turning a malty Helles into a stale mess or a hop juicy IPA into an insipid dumper in a matter of days.
Or more accurately, they shouldn’t mix, but unfortunately often do.
The default conf runs on port 8080, so you have to edit it to run on port 80, and yes it will conflict with Apache running on port 80 so you have to turn Apache off or put it on another port. Also the brew package comes with a set of default/example configuration files installed under /usr/local/etc/nginx/. I don't know what you want to change, but it's the same nginx as you use on Debian, so you can copy over your Debian nf if you want. So I expect if you link the plist to /Library/LaunchDaemons instead of ~/Library/LaunchAgents it will load at boot. Ln -sfv /usr/local/opt/nginx/*.plist ~/Library/LaunchAgents In particular, you should see something like: To have launchd start nginx at login: If you type brew info nginx you should get answers to many of your questions.
(PHP would be welcome too, but for now I just want a solid, plain old webserver, before adding PHP to it).
So I've installed nginx with Homebrew: brew install nginx I'm used to do this on Debian installs, but it's the first time I'm doing it on OSX and I want to do things well. I'm trying to install nginx on it to act as a small home web server, to quickly share files with colleagues and host some development I'm doing.
It runs 10.7.5 and can't update any further, it's got a 1.83Ghz Core2Duo and 4Gb RAM, and I've stuffed a 128Gb Apple SSD in it.
I've purchased an "old" Mac Mini ( macmini2,1) from a coworker to serve as a media server beneath my TV.