If you calculate purchase price (used or new) divided by years of security updates left you end up with used phones not being that much cheaper than new ones per year (unless you tend to break of lose your phone often).
Of course new flagship...
It's what I do.
I run raw FreeBSD for my backup holding server. The hardware is ECC enabled and can take SAS disks.
That's about as complete as it gets short of a tape robot.
There is a lot of bullshit in this thread because people haven't run an all-Mac shop and simply don't like Apple. I will caveat this by saying that I have no experience running multi-thousand system deployments; it is possible that Windows is...
This isn't good for Linux. The Wine emulation layer that allows people to run Windows software on Linux is the foundation of the Steamdeck. Many important improvements to the Wine project come from Valve.
It is hard to imagine that MS as an...
I am sure they would be very happy that the handheld is based on Linux...
I think such a takeover would put a dent into Wine development compared to how that is going now.
The macOS and Linux versions that were a stretch goal that was met during the Kickstarter have been canceled.
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1598858095/system-shock/posts/4106201
Your plan in the first post is doable. I can't help you with Windows to set up the routing, though. You probably also want a dhcp server on that central machine.
And transfers between 2 machines that are not the central one could be slower going...
That creates a single point of failure and you have to tell all those computers all the routes (unless you want to go all the way and run a routing demon).
I would hook up everything except the internet to one 10 Gb switch that can talk 2.5 Gb.
decompression is tested with for example a 75 MB archive with 9,841 files, photo library has 64 of them, the database metadata has 70,000 entry, text processing ron on 190 files, lot of those will not reach max temp on a modern 24 core cpu, but...
The problem with geekbench is not what it does, it is the data it is doing it on. The data is too small, so repeated tests are fitting better into CPU caches. For example, decompressing one jpeg repeatedly is more cache-friendly than dragging...