Dropping off the brix for repairs, dropping by the old workplace to pay for and pick up my antman crew hoodie, and probably going to pick up a replacement for the brix at SLS
cause ugh, I need a reliable home server. I suspect one reason the brix is dying so much is its fanless and overheats a lot
And probably upping the ram to 8gb (4gb from the brix, another 4gb) so I can run VMs more easily
Not sure if I'll dualboot. I want linux, and it feels like a better idea to run it on the msata. Probably will just image the windows install for future use tho
I have a device that supports OTG over it's micro usb port.
I'm looking for a device that connects to that micro usb port and offers a female micro usb port for charging, a female USB port for flash drives etc and a female Ethernet port for connecting to the Internet.
Let me try to visualize t...
> I'm looking for a device that connects to that micro usb port and offers a female micro usb port for charging, a female USB port for flash drives etc and a female Ethernet port for connecting to the Internet.
@jiggunjer not even -- you couldn't have a ton of them on a single USB 2.0 controller, but one (plus a keyboard/mouse) is fine. it's explicitly designed to handle workloads like that.
Google employee testing USB Type-C cabling and adapters. Faulty cable had power polarity reversed (Vbus connect to ground and vice versa) which blew his Chromebook Pixel.
No doubt a lawsuit will be filed and it will likely have Google's powerhouse legal team behind it.
Sadly, I'm likely not the sort of talent Google wants.
Top companies want highly-talented, deeply creative, quick-thinking people. That's not me.
...and these are not exactly trainable skills.
They want people from Harvard, Columbia, and other top-flight universities. I'm studying at a public college. Not a bad college by any means, but not the level of talent they expect.
(Yes, my college has had alumni hired at Google, but your chances of getting hired at top companies such as Microsoft or Google coming out of a public college, even with honors, are much lower than if you're coming out of an Ivy League university or other top-tier institution.)
I have a little bit of stuff on GitHub but nothing serious. It's mainly an old, forgotten benchmark that I attempted to adapt to 64-bit systems, with some success.
Effective immediately, I'm going to be making major changes aimed at addressing self-control issues that have repeatedly cropped in this chat room. My focus will be on being a calm and stoic person at all times, never losing control of myself, so that I can always act in a constructive and controlled manner even under the difficult conditions. I will not let anything like this happen again.
The Stanford marshmallow experiment was a series of studies on delayed gratification in the late 1960s and early 1970s led by psychologist Walter Mischel, then a professor at Stanford University. In these studies, a child was offered a choice between one small reward provided immediately or two small rewards if they waited for a short period, approximately 15 minutes, during which the tester left the room and then returned. (The reward was sometimes a marshmallow, but often a cookie or a pretzel.) In follow-up studies, the researchers found that children who were able to wait longer for the preferred...
> In follow-up studies, the researchers found that children who were able to wait longer for the preferred rewards tended to have better life outcomes, as measured by SAT scores, educational attainment, body mass index (BMI), and other life measures.
By the way, new mechanical keyboard is due to arrive tomorrow.
Effective immediately, I'm going to be making major changes aimed at addressing self-control issues that have repeatedly cropped in this chat room. My focus will be on being a calm and stoic person at all times, never losing control of myself, so that I can always act in a constructive and controlled manner even under the difficult conditions. I will not let anything like this happen again.
A Dyson Sphere focus on energy capture - and since that point would be moot, here's some suggestions:
Orbital Eggshell
Crumbling Civilization Obfuscator Mk I
Magrathean homework assignment
Picked up phoebe mk II. Braswell based asrock B box. Setting it up with 8 GB of ram. Need to decide if I want to move my old install over or if I should nuke and pave.
Little help with js, an event is registered as `document.addEventListener('keydown', this.onKeyDown.bind(this));`and in the function prototype of the call, it's as `ThreeMaze.prototype.onKeyDown = function(evt) {`
~400 SGD with 2gb of ram (Which I'll move to the brix), 32gb storage (Not sure if its a eMMC or msata yet). Has 2x HDMI and 1x DP out, and 2 slots for ram
The whole point of one of these is I can slap on a stick or two of ram, a HDD (and my new one has emmc + msata + sata, and I might be able to swap the wifi card out for a m2 storage device in theory) for somewhere under 500 dollars
hm. Decisions decisions. Do I rebuild this box with fedora only (and have much pain with samba), ubuntu or run the file server and torrent box as a VM....
@JourneymanGeek I bought laptop just to run some software with database remotely from other room. Do you mean to say that today I just can get NUC which is more suitable for such as well as having it as a server for streaming and VPN? I am slightly behind times...
right. Got the HDD from the old linux box into the new linux box, I need to try to see if I can get the old linux box up again since wierdly it kept crashing, upgraded the ram on my laptop with the ram from the old linux box. ^^
8gb a piece on my home server and laptop, 16 on my gaming box
I've a reproducible hard Windows lockup that appears when I press PrtScrn (and other unrelated things), drivers updated, memory checks out- any suggestions what to check next?
@Hennes How about my system, which has 4 x 4 TB 7200rpm HDDs, a GTX 980, a PCIe RAID and sound card, and a lot of USB devices connected directly to the system (not through a powered hub)? :P
Had a similar question a few months back, "I have a 600w and I think I don't have enough power, do I need to upgrade to 750w?" <List of components> "Err, you need a 300w.
STO utilized the GPU a lot more than many people expected, so they could play 10 lower-spec games just fine with no problems, but had a power draw spike when running STO, which borked their underspecced PSU
I chose to play it safe and provide for superior future upgradability (in case I decide to go quad Titan X), and buy a high-quality and high-wattage PSU for like $100 more than merely a high-quality, lower-wattage PSU
While it's generally better to overspec than underspec, it's still going to result in inefficiency.
To the extent that some pre-haswell CPUs were too powerful and would crash the system with new CPUs because they used too little power.
I did the "Spend an extra $40 on the PSU so I never have to worry" myself, but only because it's rated to be extremely efficient even at lower power levels, and completely passive (fanless) at my normal use levels
If I build a dual/quad-Xeon server with 32 hard drives five years down the line, I can shove this PSU in there without a problem.