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Turn on any upstairs bathroom fans. I find it gives the hot air an escape and allows more cool air to flow upstairs
Turn on any upstairs bathroom fans. I find it gives the hot air an escape and allows more cool air to flow upstairs
Just to throw a wrench into this post: 19.2" is also valid spacing, as indicated by the mark on your (newer) tape measure.
24" spacing will likely require 5/8" drywall to prevent flex.
Mr. Clean magic eraser
Erasure coding may be a better option than RAID.
An HP EliteDesk G4 mini desktop Is around that much
You mean Miley/Hannah Montana Linux
Lindows: Am I a joke to you?
I’d just like to interject for a moment. What you’re refering to as Hannah Montana Linux, is in fact, Miley Cyrus/Hannah Montana Linux, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, Miley plus Hannah. Hannah Montana Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather another free component of a fully functioning Miley Cyrus system made useful by the Miley corelibs, shell utilities and vital system components comprising a full OS as defined by Disney.
Many computer users run a modified version of the Miley system every day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the version of Miley which is widely used today is often called Hannah Montana Linuxand many of its users are not aware that it is basically the Miley Cyrus system, developed by the Miley Cyrus Project.
There really is a Hannah Montana Linux, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Hannah Montana is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine’s resources to the other programs that you run. The kernel is an essential part of an operating system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system. Hannah Montana Linux is normally used in combination with the Miley Cyrus operating system: the whole system is basically Miley Cyrus with Hanna Montana added, or Miley/Hannah. All the so-called Hanna MontanaLinux distributions are really distributions of Miley/Hannah!
Object storage is really popular for backups now because you can make it immutable by protocol standard and with erasure coding you can have fault tolerance across locations.
The problem with external LUNs is that they’re out of the control of the hypervisor. You can run into situations where migration events can cause access issues. If you can have the data presented through the hypervisor it will lead to less potential issues. Using object or NFS are also good options, if available.
Don’t present LUNs to VMs is the best practice. The only time you should do it is if you’re absolutely forced because you’re doing something that doesn’t support better shared disk options.
Fan limit switches are airspeed based, at least the ones I used. They’re used to make sure things like furnace blowers are actually working, otherwise cut off the heat.
How long is the stem? You can get deep hole saws that may clear it.
The simple way is to use a fan or blower limit switch. The more complicated way would be to use a mass airflow sensor and something like a Raspberry Pi to control the speed of your hood vent.
Go get a diamond hole bit and use a coke bottle full of water with a hole poked in the top to cool and lube it. Use a drill instead of a dremel. You will likely chip the fiberglass (I’m assuming that’s what you think is plastic) if you try with a rotozip bit.
Save your files to a local s3 object storage mount, enable versioning for immutability and use erasure coding for fault tolerance. You can use Lustre or some other S3 software for the mount. S3 is great for single user file access. You can also replicate to any cloud based S3 for offsite.
Where?
YAML is used across a lot of modern technologies. I would imagine using YAML makes it easier to learn for a lot of DevOps type people.
Might want to move the NAS to a separate, unrouted VLAN. Storage only needs local connections and it’s good practice not to make it routable.
Terraform destroy
Terraform apply