No worries… It’s a pretty obscure math joke anyway :-P
No worries… It’s a pretty obscure math joke anyway :-P
Maths - sin, tan and cos are all factors of the rotation of a circle, hence pi being on there. I’m not a mathematician, I just watch standup maths and can recommend his book, “love triangle” to explain this sort of stuff.
It is a bit different to say, “HP changed their recipe” versus “some dumb ass redistributor changed HP’s award winning recipe and suffered the consequences” :-D
Either way, I’m glad to get the original. Nothing better with some sausages or bacon…
I think that’s because the HP franchise their recipes, and different locations have “regional” variants. Here in the UK, it’s never significantly changed so you’re probably getting the English import - so, of course, there’s a shipping cost on top.
I’ll be honest, I’m still screwing around trying to get a working *arr stack on my pi4b, but then I’m also looking for more stuff on there and having it deployed as a network device automatically with dimension hosting, DNS, DHCP and stuff like that with a glutun VPN securing it all… So yeah :-D
If you got those running in windows, given they’re built for a Linux environment (I guess you either used docker or windows subsystem for Linux), then you’re eminently ready to move to Linux.
Bernard Hill does look a lot alike in certain angles; never seen it before myself but you pointing it out and now I can’t not see it.
That’s a bit stretched…
No you haven’t…
According to the man(8) page, it will avoid touching any blocks that have the chattr -f
flag set, which is XSR_XFLAGS_NODEFRAG… So I think if the docs are still accurate to the code, yes.
A lot of ifs in that assumption.
I understood that XFS automatically mounted SSD’s with XFS_XFLAG_NODEFRAG set? Is this not the case?
That’s because the drive was written to its limits; the defrag runs a TRIM command that safely releases and resets empty sectors. Random reads and sequential reads /on clean drives that are regularly TRIMmed/ are within random variance of each other.
Source: ran large scale data collection for a data centre when SSDs were relatively new to the company so focused a lot on it, plus lots of data from various sectors since.
Oh fuck yes. I remember reading about this year’s ago, glad to see it’s still going ahead.
Time to catch up on the lore. And by that I mean watch some kick ass videos again.
– edit –
Gives me, “right you primitive screw heads” vibes.
I always remember that it’s eXtract Ze File, tar -xzf
… But I’ll be honest, I’ve not used it in years and years
You are rubber, I am glue!
Ahem… I think you mean, “hexagons are the bestagons”
CHAIN *
or
*CAT
It was a term coined to describe the step-by-step process modern tech platforms go through:
It’s specifically that, and there wasn’t a word that described that process previously, as it’s only something that’s possible in a modern, “web scale” worldwide platform.