The Post Ninja
You have to say it in a commanding Japanese accent… Engine X
It sounds way cooler that way
N. Gin X
It’s this guy in powered up Boss form
Insert dank Winnie the Pooh meme here for F-STAB
FORTRAN my man
It does, as DDR5 comes with rudimentary ECC protection builtin.
My problem is this is an AM4 system using DDR4 memory… already outdated.
DHCP, when set up properly, makes for less work. Reservations will have the DHCP server hand out the same IP to the same hardware (MAC address) when it asks. If you have a device that is from the dinosaur age that doesn’t play nice with DHCP, then make sure you give it an address that is outside the DHCP range on the same subnet. ex: Some home routers use 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.200 as the dhcp range. Setting anything from 192.168.1.1 (or 2 if the router is on 1) to 192.168.1.99 is fine, as is 192.168.1.201-192.168.1.254 (or 253 if the router is on 254). However, by setting static ips, you have to remember those ips specifically to interconnect devices on the lan, whereas reserving via dhcp allows you to use local dns resolution to connect to devices via their hostname instead. In additon, you run the risk of ip conflicts from forgetting which device has what ip in an increasingly complex system, and if you change internet providers or routers, you have a lot of extra work to do to fix the network settings to get those static ips to connect.
Alternately, just use the link-local ipv6 address to interconnect on the lan. That doesn’t change on most devices, as it is based on the MAC address, and is always reachable on the lan.
Here’s the deal. If your server is close to using up all its RAM, then yes, more RAM better.
However, if your server is close to being full on storage, you need to address that with a bigger storage drive.
Indeed it has. Also, ground vehicles?!
Descent, Freespace 2, these two games open sourced a long time ago. They’ve been updated by the community over the years, and ascended far beyond where they started.
It’s there on AMD cpus, it’ll shut down the cpu if you forgot your heatsink for some reason even on the AM5 cpus.
Super lazy on HP to design such protection to be dependent on the OS. A good realtime priority set of threads could probably keep it running hot for longer by blocking the protection program.
That protection should be part of the system firmware.
Trying to run your own nextcloud be like
A unifi power strip on a unifi network so you can control the power switch, and setting the motherboard to auto turn on after power failure. Though this is the nuclear option for restarting the system. Maybe while you’re at it, diagnose why it keeps hanging up on you.
well, a hard drive is a bad idea to just band in, those are heavy bois, a ssd though…
I just use double stick tape, or a loop of packing tape…
I don’t see anything on being able to upgrade to a new release. Are we stil doing the nuke and pave installation every major release?