toni_bmw 3d ago • 100%
Nutanix is not especially cheap, in my opinion/experience, nor is it particularly easy to manage and maintain
toni_bmw 3d ago • 100%
I have made a comparison in recent weeks between proxmox and xcp-np/Xen Orchestra and for me proxmox is not mature enough for a work in production considering different aspects. Xcp-ng, if I see it as a solid option, especially if you pay for the Xen Orquestra subscription, which in addition to unleashing the integral management of your entire xcp-ng park, also allows you to make backups
toni_bmw 3d ago • 100%
Seems to be part of a Nortel Networks DMS Switch https://telephoneworld.org/telephone-switching-systems/northern-telecom-nortel-digital-central-office-switches/
toni_bmw 7d ago • 100%
I don't use chromium on Linux, because the times I tried it, I see that it is not easy to close it (its service is in the background with an icon in the tray) and I see that it consumes CPU, as if you are doing some activity, type of cryptocurrency mined or similar. I suppose it will be easy to check, but I prefer not to waste time on it and I use Firefox. I'm lately trying Librewolf
toni_bmw 2mo ago • 100%
Crossposted to linuxinthewild (https://lemmy.world/c/linuxinthewild)
toni_bmw 5mo ago • 100%
It's solid enough. I kept them closed to keep them in the original state
toni_bmw 5mo ago • 100%
Only 4. You need a CD-ROM to complete the installation (https://www.serverbrain.org/troubleshooting-2000/install-by-using-setup-diskettes-and-a-cdrom.html)
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/15880015 > Sealed Windows 2000 Advanced Server floppy disks
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/14954952 > My Grandfathers pre-war Signal Electric MFG Co. Morse Key > > I've inherited all my grandfathers radio and telegraph equipment. I have lots of memories of sitting on his lap in his radio room while he talked to people on the other side of the world before the internet was really a thing. He passed away in the mid 90's and I think he would have loved this modern world and all its tools for instant communication. > > This piece is likely from Signal Electrics Telegraph learners kit, there appears to be many eras of this kit from the 1920s until the 40s. I suspect he got this around the 30's but I'm not sure. Its a really cool piece of retro tech tho.
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
It is a Telefonica building located in Plaza Artós. I do not know what they will do with this beauty, since these days they are working emptying the entire plant that was occupied with copper installation. These weeks in Spain are finalizing the definitive elimination of copper lines, in favor of optic fiber
cross-posted from: https://pawb.social/post/9017412 > Tram depot in Nagasaki (+cat)
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
Barcelona, Spain. The building is owned by a telephony operating company. I understand that this is an old control to manually switch phone calls
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
Or NewPipe
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
ok, doing a first search I have not found information about this particular model
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
mmm, I wasn't aware of that; I'm going to investigate. Thank you for the comment!
toni_bmw 6mo ago • 100%
Frankly, I liked the colors, it seemed beautiful to me. But I'm uncomfortable with any machine that doesn't have RPN...
toni_bmw 7mo ago • 100%
It's a marvellous feeling, right?
We thank Dave for his decisive contribution. For future occasions try to backup everything before doing operations of this type. This small script works very well for me:
https://github.com/cleverwise/cya
That allows you to backup even hot systems. Just mount an external disc in /home/cya and run the script with sudo...
toni_bmw 7mo ago • 100%
The existing file system appears to have been damaged possibly because cfdisk has not adjusted (shrinked) the existing file system before changing the partition settings. In my case, this kind of thing I only dare to do with gparted if partitions contain file systems with data.
I would try the second option I mentioned above, as my last chance: to start a live-rescue and look that allows us to gparted, but I am not very optimistic about it
toni_bmw 7mo ago • 100%
I always love working with partitions because of the knowledge it gives you, but it is also certainly dangerous and from time to time it is unnevitable to suffer an accident. In any case I always try to do this type of operations with parted and if possible with GUI (gparted).
Being in the photo situation, can't you make a fsck as the error messages tell you?
fsck /dev/nvme0n1p2
If not, the most practical would be, IMHO, to boot from a rescue live, e.g. https://www.system-rescue.org/Download/ Once booted, you can lift the graphical interface with startx and do with gparted the operations you need on these partitions.
#!/bin/bash #Requires: html2text, wget wget -q -O - https://www.debian.org/releases/ | html2text > /tmp/debian.txt cat <<EOF $(grep '* Debian.*[Rr]elease' /tmp/debian.txt) $(grep 'current testing' /tmp/debian.txt) ----------------------------------------------------------- This system: $(lsb_release -a) EOF rm -f /tmp/debian.txt sleep 60 exit 0
toni_bmw 7mo ago • 100%
Collected oooover the years.I have been lucky enough to discover fascinating devices, on many occasions always after their time had passed, but just before they became a rarity, so I was able to get many of them at reasonable prices