Good point.
I also got an email from them about it today, so I just assumed the article was also new.
Good point.
I also got an email from them about it today, so I just assumed the article was also new.
I thought this was already announced a while back.
But nice.
This stuff is why I paid for an account.
How about Bluesky?
Then you are part of the problem.
Are you still using Twitter?
It’s really not.
With the things you tried it did.
Believe me, I was part of a team testing compatibility.
Which is weird, since Win2k definitely had lower hardware compatibility than XP, Vista, 7, etc.
It wasn’t consumer-focused and just didn’t have the driver compatibility from vendors yet.
That’s not true at all.
I definitely wasn’t happier with my computer back then.
TempleOS it is.
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Because I have a total of 28 drives and it works really well and is flexible.
12 of them are in a Synology though
I’ve been doing USB with raid on several servers for 10 years. No random disconnects.
Plug and play is not any reason at all.
I need to do some more formal testing, but I’ve found the discharge rate of my ecoflow to be baffling compared to my Jackery or a big Bluetti I have. My experience has been similar to yours.
Which has surprised me because in general I’ve only heard good things about them.
It very frequently is not.
Do they legally have an obligation to care for that? I’m still not understanding what would make this even remotely likely to succeed.
Which model Dell?
Buying few-year old enterprise gear can be a really cost-effective way to get a ton of power and expandability. But the noise, footprint, and power requirements seem pretty niche, even for homelab/selfhost people.
But I’m curious if you’re talking about a full-depth rack system like I’m assuming, or something else.
Personally, I switched to a handful of very small-footprint systems (mostly NUC/SFF PCs, and some laptops). And use cheap jbod enclosures when I need to add external storage.