If only you could just sorta
[code]move foo.service bar.service && systemctl daemon-reload[/code]
or
[code]sed -i -- 's/\(Description=\).*/\1bar/' foo.service && systemctl daemon-reload[/code]
This is a HP omen gaming pc with a Gtx 1060 that sells for $1700 at my workplace.
[t]https://i.imgur.com/7ScxZ7T.jpg[/t]
[QUOTE=Starship;52712439]This is a HP omen gaming pc with a Gtx 1060 that sells for $1700 at my workplace.
[t]https://i.imgur.com/7ScxZ7T.jpg[/t][/QUOTE]
Never seen a heatsink that disappointing before on a 1060.
[QUOTE=Mike16112;52712503]Never seen a heatsink that disappointing before on a 1060.[/QUOTE]
I was appalled. We have a Lenovo that is like 30 percent cheaper with a real reference cooler.
That thing must throttle constantly with that on it.
The last self-test routine completed with a failure of the read element
SMART says OK
Drive is 8 years old now
I am going to guess that it is just a outright failure and I should just go ahead and write it off huh?
Never seen this error before though.
I know the drive supports these tests as it runs on a separate drive that is the same model that is just as old.
I got all the data off of it just fine. CRC Verified too.
[QUOTE=jordguitar;52713069]The last self-test routine completed with a failure of the read element
SMART says OK
Drive is 8 years old now
I am going to guess that it is just a outright failure and I should just go ahead and write it off huh?
Never seen this error before though.
I know the drive supports these tests as it runs on a separate drive that is the same model that is just as old.
I got all the data off of it just fine. CRC Verified too.[/QUOTE]
Don't think SMART stores anything regarding the read head, so makes sense that only an actual diagnostic test would catch it.
One classmate said that he had a HDD get a head crash right when starting up so it stopped.
He carefully took the HDD apart and unstuck the head, getting the HDD to work again. Seems so unbelievable I almost believe it.
[QUOTE=Mike16112;52712503]Never seen a heatsink that disappointing before on a 1060.[/QUOTE]
It looks like they just picked the cheapest 1060 with a really dinky looking cooler..
I was looking at the cost of 10Gbps networking equipment and its cheap enough I'm tempted to buy a pair of pci-e cards and sfp+'s to link my NAS to my desktop.
All the while making my 8Mbps peak download speeds look even more pathetic.
I don't see a real home use for 10G, Gigabit is fine for huge transfers and if it's gigantic just let it run overnight. Most people don't even know how to properly take advantage of gigabit, so I don't think messing with 10G will bring them the expected boost, especially with other hardware bottlenecks.
[QUOTE=SEKCobra;52713461]I don't see a real home use for 10G, Gigabit is fine for huge transfers and if it's gigantic just let it run overnight. Most people don't even know how to properly take advantage of gigabit, so I don't think messing with 10G will bring them the expected boost, especially with other hardware bottlenecks.[/QUOTE]
I was mostly looking at it for iSCSI. Also [i]speed[/i], gotta go fast.
[QUOTE=SEKCobra;52713461]I don't see a real home use for 10G, Gigabit is fine for huge transfers and if it's gigantic just let it run overnight. Most people don't even know how to properly take advantage of gigabit, so I don't think messing with 10G will bring them the expected boost, especially with other hardware bottlenecks.[/QUOTE]
Eh, it'd be really nice to have in my ESXi host. Even if my other systems are just gig it means I can still move a hell of a lot more data. Even a slow hard drive can transfer and higher than gig speeds, and when you add SSD's it's useful. Plus sometime soon I'd like to build a SAN with 10gb fiber to eliminate mechanical storage in most my systems.
If I was getting a NAS for video editing, I'd want 10Gbps networking. Having hard drives that can go faster than 100MB/s transfer at Gigabit LAN speeds is a bit slow. You can have spinning hard drives going like 200MB/s nowadays. And you can be Linus and slap SSDs into your NAS.
[QUOTE=garychencool;52713990]If I was getting a NAS for video editing, I'd want 10Gbps networking. Having hard drives that can go faster than 100MB/s transfer at Gigabit LAN speeds is a bit slow. You can have spinning hard drives going like 200MB/s nowadays. And you can be Linus and slap SSDs into your NAS.[/QUOTE]
The connection to my microserver is wireless to the router, wired to the box
It hurts, but it's usable.
[QUOTE=ballads;52715066]I did a bad thing today... i installed a new stereo in my car and managed to fry the wires that saves the time and turns the inside lights on and the unlock buttons and the trunk button[/QUOTE]
You mean literally fry the wires, or "I just shorted +12V to the frame and blew a fuse"?
If you just accidentally touched the power rails together, check the fusebox.
[QUOTE=ballads;52715066]I did a bad thing today... i installed a new stereo in my car and managed to fry the wires that saves the time and turns the inside lights on and the unlock buttons and the trunk button[/QUOTE]
Why didn't you have a fuse?
Is there a really flat PSU for slim line cases you can get.
[QUOTE=Starship;52712439]This is a HP omen gaming pc with a Gtx 1060 that sells for $1700 at my workplace.
[t]https://i.imgur.com/7ScxZ7T.jpg[/t][/QUOTE]Very 2002 looking. I remember when most of MSI's PCBs looked like that.
[QUOTE=RoboChimp;52715503]Is there a really flat PSU for slim line cases you can get.
[/QUOTE]
Flex-atx? 1U server PSU with quieter/temp controlled fan?
[QUOTE=Van-man;52715528]Flex-atx? 1U server PSU with quieter/temp controlled fan?[/QUOTE]Interesting didn't consider server parts, does that come out as regular PSU connectors?
[QUOTE=RoboChimp;52715545]Interesting didn't consider server parts, does that come out as regular PSU connectors?[/QUOTE]
They're slowly becoming less common, but 1U and 2U servers with generic ATX connectors are still being manufactured and developed
[QUOTE=Van-man;52715556]They're slowly becoming less common, but 1U and 2U servers with generic ATX connectors are still being manufactured and developed[/QUOTE]Anyway, thanks for that, I'm doing some research into building an old Atari ST style keyboard PC case. One, to imagine what it could have been like if that design had continued and two, because I just want a PC that's easy to move around. Nah, I'm just doing it for the fun of it.
[QUOTE=RoboChimp;52715591]Anyway, thanks for that, I'm doing some research into building an old Atari ST style keyboard PC case. One, to imagine what it could have been like if that design had continued and two, because I just want a PC that's easy to move around. Nah, I'm just doing it for the fun of it.[/QUOTE]
Well, if you're one of those unfortunate souls who believe a powerbrick is a great idea for stationary or semi-stationary devices without a beefy battery built-in, then there's also the [URL="http://www.mini-box.com/DC-DC"]Pico-PSU's[/URL]
One of my RAM sticks seems to be developing a fault because I've gotten a few memory related system crashes lately. I guess it's time to start looking into upgrading.
Might as well look into upgrading some core hardware as well. I want to get some DDR4+ RAM, but my motherboard doesn't support anything over DDR3. My FX-8350 is just fine, but I might as well just grab a Ryzen CPU. And I need a new power supply because my current one is old and barely meets my power demands.
I like how one issue quickly becomes something expensive.
[QUOTE=RoboChimp;52715503]Is there a really flat PSU for slim line cases you can get. [/QUOTE]
Closest "standard" PSU's would be some of silverstones small form factor models. but not quite flat.
[QUOTE=Brt5470;52717046]Closest "standard" PSU's would be some of silverstones small form factor models. but not quite flat.[/QUOTE]
Corsair makes some SFX units now that aren't bad. Market really needed some spicing up.
[QUOTE=RoboChimp;52715591]Anyway, thanks for that, I'm doing some research into building an old Atari ST style keyboard PC case. One, to imagine what it could have been like if that design had continued and two, because I just want a PC that's easy to move around. Nah, I'm just doing it for the fun of it.[/QUOTE]
Anything under mini-ITX, I think, works better if you just stick laptop guts inside it. Less noise, less heat, less bits knocking around. With mini PCI adaptors and such, you could probably even get away with sticking some thinkpad's brains and a SFF GPU inside an atari ST or C64C.
You can probably pick up a Lenovo Y40 or whatever for dirt cheap since after 2 years the plastics will be falling apart. They usually have a solid CPU and mobile GPU.
[QUOTE=Kiwi;52717273]Someone did this recently for almost nothing.
[video]https://youtu.be/e3fnsGHe8eE[/video]
Not my taste in style but hey it’s functional and gets the job done[/QUOTE]
Honestly at this point the easiest way to make an Atari ST/C64 style keyboard PC is just take literally any laptop and remove the screen then smooth over where the hinges were. Done.
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