Mine worked for months and then one day just never worked again. I have 6 of them as a test cluster for work, only 4 ever went weird. All the same drives, bios etc etc
Mine worked for months and then one day just never worked again. I have 6 of them as a test cluster for work, only 4 ever went weird. All the same drives, bios etc etc
The server refused to boot and the ILO logs reported the error. It’s a false sensor 31.
Mine rejected sata ssds with something like sensor 41 overheating but that sensor doesn’t exist…
Just be cautious that the HP backplane can sometimes reject non-hp drives at random with a sensor error for a sensor that doesn’t exist…
Start one? What you seeking and where…
Poor parts consistentcy and my previously mentioned issues.
Might just be me getting a bad batch though.
Do you have any issues? I used to find that the T420 series were hot garbage… Trackpads that didn’t always work, the nipple mouse never worked, keyboard keys being soft stickied and no external hdmi.
Same… Although maybe I’m just searching niche problems.
Hadrian’s wall still stands… Although in most places it’s easy to cross 😂
If the motherboard has a built in 2d video card you’ll be fine, otherwise you can try via serial which will be slow. Ipmi can sometimes do video or it’s serial over Lan.
Serial bit will be slow and might not be default so the first bit night be really tricky. Also some systems won’t post with a video card, especially in the consumer world.
I’d personally boot with a GPU then swap it out once the system is correctly configured for ssh access.
There might also be some magic/weirdness with IP routing in the kernel. Have a look at net.ipv4.ip_forward system variable.
Are you sure you’re not using local hostnames / DNS resolution?
You may also need to updates your nfs exports file for the new subnet. And also update systems on the fstab changes (daemon-reload).
My guess with that TDP is yes. Iirc it’s about 100W per connector.
Other than fulling up storage, what is the actual issue? If the image is orphaned then surely nobody can actually access the content? Sure you could be blind hosting things but if nobody can get the content back out then the abuse is surely minimal apart from say a complex cyber and physical targetted campaign or simply fulling up storage…
This is pretty cool. Perfect idea for a small standalone Lemmy instance.
Federation more or less means the info is copied, so from a dcma standpoint the instance is still liable. If content is deleted from the main instance, it doesn’t always delet from a federated one.
This would de different if you could proxy instead of copy the data on federation.
Use the Lutris website to find the game and install script, that should bypass the login check and let you bring your own exe.
IMO the benefit of making MATLAB the standard is that it’s tried, tested and can be verified my many other institutions. It is however a dick move for the institute to not provide access to the software they standardise on, even if it’s remotely used.
Thanks for this, I will look at deploying Octave on our systems alongside MATLAB. I was unaware they were the same/similar package (I don’t use the software, only deploy it) and had never been asked for it.
Importantly and how it’s different to FF is that it boots the content without calling the disk reset and if you keep the disk button wedged then that reset never triggers, so that copy protection isn’t called, where as FF basically triggers a drive reset which is why you couldn’t use that.