I got a question and I figure someone here will be able to help me out
So I'm currently running my webserver off consumer-grade hardware, and while I think it'll do fine in terms of processing power, that's definitely not the case for storage
So how do I go about implementing really fast network storage, off/on which the webserver scripts can read/write on the go?
I'm thinking of getting some sort of a PC with enough expansion ports (SATA or NVMe - preferably the latter) to be able to set up proper drive mirroring
But once that's done... how do I go about the software side of things?
Just... good ol' Windows folders shared over LAN?
(Network is 1Gbps)
Or... do I do some sort of local storage and mirroring/backups to the network? If this is still applicable, then disks are faster than network
Or I might have misread the case. The lawsuit is about the company hiding its intentions from shareholders, saying that it's not about taxes when it in fact is.
> Rather than tell investors the truth that the tax benefits of reincorporating in Ireland were the primary rationale for the Combination – indeed, the sine qua non for the Combination – AbbVie chose to downplay the tax benefits in light of the negative stigma of these inversions and dupe investors into believing this transaction made strategic sense with or without the tax inversion benefits when subsequent events proved that the Combination would not proceed absent the tax benefits.
Wat.
So investors, after all, don't like tax inversions...
Other relevant cases involve Medtronic and Johnson Controls.
(in both cases involving the capital gains tax that companies' shareholders are subject to when they undergo inversions)