Might we considered there may be a tiny difference in scope between an OS and an app like Armory Crate.
Endorkend
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Because they’d need to support it or hire an assload of developers to bugfix and contribute to the projects they include in their distro.
And that’s something those companies don’t like doing.
System76 is a hardware vendor specifically created to cater to the Linux sphere.
I guess they mean “how to make buggy messy often usermade Desktop distributions more popular.”
As Linux itself is insanely popular, it’s everywhere and runs everything. From the vast majority of server and network infrastructure to most phones.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Not Dead Yet: WD Releases New 6TB 2.5-Inch External Hard Drives - First Upgrade in Seven Years
3·2 years agoLooks like this one except that it is sealed on one end and the caddies for the two drives have a cover plate that screws in over a gasket and rubber ring.
I got it in a shop in Hong Kong when I was there for a convention earlier this year. No idea if you can find it online, maybe somewhere like Alibaba.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Not Dead Yet: WD Releases New 6TB 2.5-Inch External Hard Drives - First Upgrade in Seven Years
22·2 years agoI have a dual NVMe USB3 caddy that’s smaller than most 2.5 HDD housings with currently 2 2TB drives, you can buy 4 and 8TB nvme drives these days too. I can throw that thing out a car and it won’t care.
And the drives are easily swappable and so are the electronics in the casing.
So no, 2.5" HDD’s still are an utterly dead end of technology.
Especially with these and some other vendors, the USB interface is part of the drive (there’s no SATA port on them), so you can’t swap them or take them out for data recovery. They are HDD tech, which doesn’t do shocks or any other sort of roughhousing, they are slow as shit and use far more power than any NVMe drive.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Not Dead Yet: WD Releases New 6TB 2.5-Inch External Hard Drives - First Upgrade in Seven Years
29·2 years agoBecause you flex and replug the interface often.
The thing you use to plug your phone, tablet, drives and other things with is very often the failure point unless you break screens or get water in them.
Normally you simply have a HDD drive with a SATA interface in there, so if the USB connector fails, you can still easily recover your data.
With these things, you’re lucky if they even offer the possibility of repairing or recovering the drive.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@lemmy.world•Slack has been scanning your messages to train its AI models
21·2 years agoThe more they push to train AI on our shitpostings on social networks, the more I’m certain we’re fucking doomed if their AI ever reaches consciousness.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I have a IBM eServer xSeries 346, does anyone has experience with the ServeRaid-7k, to create a RAID array? Also, you can ask me anything about this 2005 beast!
3·2 years agoThey have a secondary motherboard that hosts the Slot CPUs, 4 single core P3 Xeons. I also have the Dell equivalent model but it has a bum mainboard.
With those 90’s systems, to get Windows NT to use more than 1 core, you have to get the appropriate Windows version that actually supports them.
Now you can simply upgrade from a 1 to a 32 core CPU and Windows and Linux will pick up the difference and run with it.
In the NT 3.5 and 4 days, you actually had to either do a full reinstall or swap out several parts of the Kernel to get it to work.
Downgrading took the same effort as a multicore windows Kernel ran really badly on a single core system.
As for the Sun Fires, the two models I mentioned tend to be highly available on Ebay in the 100-200 range and are very different inside than an X86 system. You can go for 400 or higher series to get even more difference, but getting a complete one of those can be a challenge.
And yes, the software used on some of these older systems was a challenge in itself, but they aren’t really special, they are pretty much like having different vendors RGB controller softwares on your system, a nuisance that you should try to get past.
For instance, the IBM 5000 series raid cards were simply LSI cards with an IBM branded firmware.
The first thing most people do is put the actual LSI firmware on them so they run decently.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I have a IBM eServer xSeries 346, does anyone has experience with the ServeRaid-7k, to create a RAID array? Also, you can ask me anything about this 2005 beast!
2·2 years agoOh, I get it. But a baseline HP Proliant from that era is just an x86 system barely different from a desktop today but worse/slower/more power hungry in every respect.
For history and “how things changed”, go for something like a Sun Fire system from the mid 2000’s (280R or V240 are relatively easy and cheap to get and are actually different) or a Proliant from the mid to late 90’s (I have a functioning Compaq Proliant 7000 which is HUGE and a puzzlebox inside).
x86 computers haven’t changed much at all in the past 20 years and you need to go into the rarer models (like blade systems) to see an actual deviation from the basic PC alike form factor we’ve been using for the past 20 years and unique approaches to storage and performance.
For self hosting, just use something more recent that falls within your priceclass (usually 5-6 years old becomes highly affordable). Even a Pi is going to trounce a system that old and actually has a different form factor.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I have a IBM eServer xSeries 346, does anyone has experience with the ServeRaid-7k, to create a RAID array? Also, you can ask me anything about this 2005 beast!
71·2 years agoYou should replace that thing with something more modern. I had a 5000p chipset system someone gave me with dual quad cores and an assload of ram.
The shitty box idled over 400W. I went as far as getting low power ram and the newest CPU it would support that also supported frequency and power scaling and it still used over 400W on idle.
This while I had a Xeon E5 box that was only a few years younger that uses more in the neighborhood of 50W on idle and utterly decimates the 5000 series box in CPU performance.
You’re probably better of fetching some old Ryzen 1800x system of ebay for higher performance and leagues lower power consumption.
As for the raid, don’t use it. Hardware raid has always been shit and in modern Linux and Windows is as good as completely depricated.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Activision Blizzard’s ex-CEO Bobby Kotick reportedly wants to buy TikTok
7·2 years agoI tried TikTok some time ago and got bored with it.
I’m the type that prefers long form content. I watch 20-240 minute videos on YouTube,
I never got into Vines or the Vines/TikTok clone thing YouTube is doing either.
So most of the crap I see from TikTok is here, on Reddit and Mastodon.
And normally only the most entertaining crap from a platform gets to other platforms and I’m not impressed by what I’ve seen, at all.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Activision Blizzard’s ex-CEO Bobby Kotick reportedly wants to buy TikTok
38·2 years agoWell, TikTok can’t get any worse, right?
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.ml•Chernobyl's mutant wolves appear to have developed resistance to cancer, study finds
7·2 years agoEveryone has “cancer or whatever” resistance. That’s why DNA works, it has repair mechanisms.
Getting cancer is when that mechanism either fails or isn’t good enough to repair the damage.
Abnormal radiation levels can cause an excess of damage or different type of damage than what your natural mechanism is capable of fixing.
We’re constantly being radiated, we’re constantly employing our resistances and defenses against radiation.
We float around on a rock in a sea of radiation and even we ourselves emit low levels of (mostly harmless) radiation.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.ml•Chernobyl's mutant wolves appear to have developed resistance to cancer, study finds
4·2 years agoNah, just filters out those that are weaker/less resistant.
Everyone has radiation resistance. Our DNAs repair mechanisms protect us from DNA errors from all sorts of sources.
A region where high radiation exposure becomes daily life simply makes the this trait the dominant one for animals to live long enough to procreate, meaning the ones with the best mechanisms will survive, the others die.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.ml•Chernobyl's mutant wolves appear to have developed resistance to cancer, study finds
481·2 years agoA mutation for having a higher radiation resistance or higher resistance to cancer is something that already happens in nature, but in most of the animal world those are relatively useless traits, normally cancer doesn’t develop fast enough to stop procreation.
In Chernobyl, the highly elevated radiation would normally kill animals before they can even breed. The ones that don’t have the resistance die before they get the chance, the ones that do have a higher resistance breed.
With humans in the modern age, a resistance to cancer or radiation trait never gets the chance to become a dominant evolutionary trait as most all people only develop the cancer later in life and the ones that do get cancer early more and more often can get treatment giving them a chance to procreate even when they got cancer young.
Outside Chernobyl, there is no evolutionary pressure for a trait like that to become dominant.
Living long enough to procreate is the primary drive in nature.
We generally don’t see fast evolutionary changes in nature because nature doesn’t change quickly often.
Leave it to us, humans, to create situations where the change is drastic and quick.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Technology@beehaw.org•Your next Windows PC may need at least 16GB of RAM
4·2 years agoEven as far back as XP/Vista Microsoft has wanted to run the file system as more of an adaptive database than a classical hierarchical file system.
The leaked beta for Vista had this included and it ran like absolute shit, mostly because harddrives are slow and ram was at a premium, especially in Vista as it was such a bloated piece or shit.
NTFS has since evolved to include more and more of these “smart” file system components.
Now they want to go full on with this “smart” approach to the filesystem.
It’ll still be slow and shit, just like it was 2 decades ago.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•what has worked for you to stop getting angry thinking about people who hurt you?
41·2 years agoI’ve become so jaded with people in general I can’t be arsed bothering with what anyone but my wife and mother think of me, do to me or say to me.
(my dog and cat too tbh)
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.ml•Israel army says it's investigating soldier over killing of detained Gazan
51·2 years agoThere isn’t a single sane person who doesn’t consider Hamas a collective bag of dicks.
What Hamas does doesn’t excuse what Israel does to Palestinians.
Endorkend@kbin.socialto
World News@lemmy.ml•Israel army says it's investigating soldier over killing of detained Gazan
201·2 years agoLook up whataboutism.

Not even one of those points will accelerate Linux adoption to being with a decade of the snowballing level at which point it could Dethrone Windows.
You been drinking some absinthe or smoking the ganja-weed?
Or just straight up snorting Flakka