@JourneymanGeek thanks, yeah I notice now I nistalled the driver I click file..print and it sees the printer, i'll do that for any computers I add to the network. I guess maybe the driver uses that printer WiFi/wireless access point of sorts. I don't think it should really show up as a network for my computer to connect to though! The only wireless networks I would want to connect to from that taskbar icon are for the internet!
It's sorta expensive and not very prestigious and not my primary choice, but it's nice to know that I have this to fall back upon if nothing else works out
holy crap; SSD prices have taken a nosedive... in June 2018 I spent $1698 per drive for 2 x Samsung 860 Pro 4 TB, which now cost $920; the 860 Evo 4 TB, which just won't last quite as long, is only $661!
this is great... who's pushing prices down like this???? and this is retail from amazon.com!
I'm looking for a PCIe-based SATA card, to add more internal SATA-III ports. While a great many of them exist, most are based on an old Marvell series of controllers or the equivalent ASMedia (ASM1061?) controller, which only support PCIe 2.0. Due to a lack of motherboard PCIe slots, and a desire...
> Intel's processor shortage is affecting so much of the PC component market. I'm actually a bit worried that this indicates that Intel, as a company, has gotten so large that it is "too big to fail", a single point of failure for the whole PC industry.
I'm working on a project that uses the pi camera module and 35 or more Raspberry Pi Zero Ws to take pictures and send them back to a central computer. Everything works fine with just 1 Pi connected, I get a transfer speed of ~2MB/s over wifi and it only takes about 10 seconds to transfer the pict...
I am just learning so please forgive the simple nature of my question. I understand that routers have four (4) types of memory:
ROM Contains the power-on self test and the bootstrap program for the router. The ROM chips also contain either a subset or the complete router IOS
NVRAM Stores the ...
I have no idea what I'm learning. For work it's most of random assorted bits of knowledge. Lately a bit of docker stuff, it's been a few weeks or maybe a couple months I haven't coded anything properly and I feel in a sort of limbo where I'm not exactly a dev and not exactly devops / sysadmin.
And I want to learn cool stuff in this area but there's no decent infrastructure. All our team has is a shitty server with 4 cores and 8GB RAM to run a dozen services =/
IMHO, "full stack" means "you're doing the work of three and getting paid as one", and "devops" mean "we now fired our sysadmins, their tasks are now yours"
@djsmiley2k Oh and I'm also on the first steps to running my own mail forwarder on a server, so I can get mail sent to my own domain and routed to my gmail account
Oh and I finally bought a domain for that.
Did you hear that, @rahuldottech? You're not the only one with vanity domains here anymore!
Only thing kid's got more than domains is girlfriends :P
Yeah, it saves a lot of time and at first seems amazing and you fall in love. Then there are the gotchas and you spend a lot of time in order to save a lot of time...
cpu = open('/sys/class/hwmon/hwmon1/device/temp1_input','r') for line in cpu.readline(): cpu_temp = (float(line) / 1000) print ("cpu_temp is %s" % cpu_temp) cpu.close()