@timmy well sure, you're not paying for any of it so expecting any level of service is borderline insane.
@timmy well sure, you're not paying for any of it so expecting any level of service is borderline insane.
@russss i have created billions and billions of files on single filesystems and never ran into this that's crazy
@russss how is that even happening??
@killyourfm indeed. if you want to edit straight from the NAS, i would recommend one with 10Gbit network port, and make sure devices connected to it do so using 10Gbit networking too. That way there's little chance you'll have any issues with it, it might even be faster than editing locally (although latency could be higher).
The tricky part is finding a good tradeoff of which RAID type to use, and the answer depends on how much you value performance vs security, and which NAS and filesystem.
@killyourfm USB-C is fine for all of those, even networked is completely fine. It all depends on the speed of the interfaces and cables. USB-C can be USB 2 speeds 480Mb/s, or it can be USB 4 speeds of 40Gbit/s.
@tychotithonus so register it again like it says? You were probably informed of this and forgot to register it before the switch.
@zef might be even better in the future to do this process in reverse. document what runs where and how, and use that information to make it happen, rather than going the other way about it.
@Tarnport yeah, my phrasing wasn't very good.
@Tarnport yes, but also we do need regulations on how things are being used and what companies can do, to protect that common well.
@tofu although quite expensive, GPD has stuff like that. My WIN MINI is almost that size imo, certainly fits in my pockets. It's not an emulation handheld though, it's a PC with built-in controller, so maybe that's not as useful for you.
@ori that can't be real. we literally invented a programming language for BUSINESS PEOPLE to query information from systems, and decided that readability was not worth it? why
@vkc @killyourfm second this. and it allows you to test things over and over and over locally, before running it remotely. and you can also care less about what the underlying distribution is too, which is nice.
@DaveMWilburn you're supposed to clean it often.
@arch maybe they're timestamps with too many decimals getting interpreted incorrectly?
@dandylyons it matches on the resulting value, and if it is an Ok result type, it'll return the wrapped value. If not, it'll propagate the error/panic and crash the program.
@paultk what are you doing that requires 32GB of RAM to comfortably use??? I mean sure my work laptop with 8GB can't do shit, but that is by far mostly because of all the Windows services that are running on it. My netbook from 2012 runs fine, albeit slow since I haven't changed the HDD in it since I bought it back then.
@platymew that was always the case, yes. Manjaro has always been terrible for security, and in their wiki describes exactly how too.
@Paradox nor do I, and I'm not Italian either