Thunderbolt has nothing to do with an integrated GPU.
Thunderbolt has nothing to do with an integrated GPU.
Proxmox with Proxmox Backup Server will do most of that if you were willing to move of CentOS Stream and onto Proxmox.
I’ve never heard of them but I’ve bought a lot of random RAM before. If they use proper RAM chips like micron, Kingston, hynix, Samsung, etc then I wouldn’t be too worried.
pfSense virtual router connect to a FTTP NTD and a Huawei LTE 4G router
It’s the multicoloured headers that are to the right of the cap next to the usb port.
Why wouldn’t it? A lot of people install games to the default location and the default location for a lot of things, games included, is C:\Program Files
Use the same IP range at both places and give the 2 NASes the same IP address at both places.
Last time I did this, i mapped out which plug corresponded to which device that linux saw then wrote a script that told me which hard drive was plugged into where and put it into a csv file.
This was for my disk testing tower, so when it told me “sdb” had finished badblocks, i would know which hdd sdb was.
Brought the camera back to homelab A, double checked IP address, still on the correct range.
Put a device onto same subnet, can ping it.
Going to try and set it back to DHCP and take it back to Homelab B and see what happens again.
It was something I was worried about when I had services exposed to the internet, but now that I’m behind CGNat, I’m not so worried because I have nothing exposed lol.
It whooshed over my head lol.
Hah…you got me. Good one.
This is a software issue anyway with this Realtek NIC.
Not the first time it’s happened so I have mitigations in place, unfortunately because I shuffled some VMs around yesterday due to a power outage, the mitigations failed. That has since been sorted.
Sure, but nowhere near as often.
?? That doesn’t make sense…
This is a i7-8700 on an Asus Prime H310M-E motherboard.
All I could afford at the time unfortunately.
Onboard NICs in servers are pretty much either going to be Intel or Broadcoms, so it’s just something I just don’t even need to think about.
Brilliant, i was looking for something like this as well for a project, thanks!
Plenty of enterprise equipment has 48V DC power supplies.
My work setup is Mains -> Rectifier shelf -> DC PSUs/Devices
Batteries are hooked into rectifier //
About 300W, ~7kWh a day, costs me about $80 AUD a month.