

I’m running Raid z2;and have considered even z3 which should be plenty of redundancy for older drives. Well that and backing up data to a separate location.
I’m running Raid z2;and have considered even z3 which should be plenty of redundancy for older drives. Well that and backing up data to a separate location.
That drive could run another 5 years without any problems.
But even in JavaScript a string representation of null is not equal to a null literal. ‘null’ or “null” are not the same as null
How the heck does a system interpret a string value null as a literal null? That seems insane to me that there really is software out there written like this. “null” != null… Or so I thought, maybe there are languages out there that this can happen in easily? Or someone is storing the string value of null in a non nullable database column?
But Mac or WSL are not Linux.
I thought Mac was unix which is similar but different from Linux?
What developer uses Linux in professional work? Maybe for on the side stuff but I haven’t seen any corporate Linux machines.
Hmm so back in Windows 3.1, Wikipedia said paintbrush was a Mac app from the early 90s.
It was always called Paint. Paintbrush is the Mac equivalent
Paint is still in the OS and hasn’t changed. Paint 3D is different
What the heck is paintbrush?
I guess as a C# guy I’ve never had to deal with an issue like this. Most of the time the exceptions are pretty easy to diagnose unless it’s in the UI or in some async function.
Honestly the best place to register a domain is http://ww
Not familiar with an iPhone SE, assuming it’s a smallish phone?
The Toshiba x300 is a consumer drive, the drive they are offering is an enterprise grade storage drive. I have only bought enterprise or nas speed drives in the past. Consumer drives may not be built to the same standards.