From 49143dbe4edae8f00f48ce70b4e80719371ded52 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: James Ruskin Date: Tue, 3 Jun 2014 15:10:16 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Typos Combined sentences. --- what_is_chef.tex | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/what_is_chef.tex b/what_is_chef.tex index 1b90580..281b694 100644 --- a/what_is_chef.tex +++ b/what_is_chef.tex @@ -18,4 +18,4 @@ \section{Summary} The key underlying principle of Chef is that you (the user) knows best about what your environment is, what it should do, and how it should be maintained. The chef-client is designed to not make assumptions about any of those things. Only the individuals on the ground — that's you and your team—understand the technical problems and what is required to solve them. Only your team can understand the human problems (skill levels, audit trails, and other internal issues) that are unique to your organization and whether any single technical solution is viable. -The idea that you know best about what should happen in your organization goes hand-in-hand with the notion that you still need help keeping it all running. It is rare that a single individual knows everything about a very complex problem, let alone knows all of the steps that may be required to solve them. The same is true with tools. Chef provides help with infrastructure management. And Chef can help solve very complicated problems. Chef also has a large community of users who have a lot of experience solving a lot of very complex problems. That community can provide knowledge and support in areas that your organization may not have and (along with Chef) can help your organization solve any complex problem. \ No newline at end of file +The idea that you know best about what should happen in your organization goes hand-in-hand with the notion that you still need help keeping it all running. It is rare that a single individual knows everything about a very complex problem, let alone knows all of the steps that may be required to solve them. The same is true with tools. Chef provides help with infrastructure management, and can help solve very complicated problems. Chef also has a large community of users who have a lot of experience solving a lot of very complex problems. That community can provide knowledge and support in areas that your organization may not have and (along with Chef) can help your organization solve any complex problem.