@AwalGarg it is the sole monentary exchange method for funds transfer , created only on poly quark computers , which will revolutionise the entire world, and finnaly solidify the computer generated coin method.
@kalina oh ok, so when I go into the Eclipse Plugin Development Environment to be an uber-geek (what's geekier than writing a plugin for an extensible IDE to help other programmers be more productive?), I'm essentially getting some nice, good social activity, right?
@kalina I like being the shit on the internet for a few hours. The main reason I do stuff on github (and on SE) is for that feeling of "ahhhhhhhhhh" you get when people are like :D at your code
awwww, just thought of an awesome name for Boost to be renamed to (C++ lib in case you don't know what it is)... at least rename the namespace if not the whole project... to nonstd :D
since std:: is the namespace specifier for standard library calls, nonstd:: should be the namespace specifier for almost all other stuff you could need (which is pretty much what Boost is) :D
@DanielBeck I would replace one at a time, because it's likely that any further disk failures will cause loss of the array, and recovering two drives at once puts more load on the good disks than recovering a single drive... so you can recover one disk, get that level of redundancy back up there, then recover the other, while being ready to replace any more failures
hopefully you don't have 8 disks from the same make/model and production line and manufacturing date, because if you do, chances are all of them will fail at approximately the same time
@allquixotic No I don't, but in hindsight it's still not diverse enough. The irreplaceable stuff is backed up, and the rest would be annoying but I could deal. We'll see what happens. Thanks.
well at least you won't lose any irreplaceable data... stick a fresh drive in and pray you don't suffer an extended downtime from another disk failing during the recovery
@Boris_yo not in reality. Another strange thing about the telecom store At&t , for some reason there are very few , like 1-10 employees who have stayed there as a career. Could it actually be worse work than flipping burgers?
@Boris_yo All of my lines had been unlisted in public phone lists for much of the existance of them. Sometimes i had paid extra $5 to keep them out, sometimes it was just not on the radar, and sometimes a small Publisher of phone lists in paper form (aka some form of yellow or white pages) would publish it anyway.
If you have the space then doing a full backup before replacing might be a good idea. Especially since restoring a backup is often faster than rebuilding an array (or even rebuilding it twice)
@Bob sounds like they are just indicating it is "by design" so people dont ask why it does it like this? which could seem to be random? but mabey is just simple.