Yeah, depending on what you use SSH for, the top two pictures are switched.
Yeah, depending on what you use SSH for, the top two pictures are switched.
It’s Linus Torvalds. He invented Linux and it’s his baby. He’s doing it because it’s his legacy, and he cares.
He’s probably never not working on it 24x7x365.24
That’s my nickname too.
ubuntu - kali
fedora - arch
Great write-up! This was a lot of fun to read and you clearly put in a lot of effort.
I’m going to go against the norm here. It’s probably better to have them plugged in sometimes, if not always. Old capacitors can dry out and become brittle, which can destroy a mainboard when they surge and pop.
Nothing you do will be 100% guaranteed to keep electronics alive forever, because components wear out. Each console will have specific components with specific failure types that means that some are better having always power, some are better with sometimes power, and some are better with zero power. But my gut says that older consoles plugged into a quality UPS will probably last longer than a console sitting in a box unpowered.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_plague
This is just one type of failure mode, but there are many other things that can cause damage. Power surges, transformer enamel wearing out, resistors cracking, thermal cycling of solder, thermal paste drying out, permanent CMOS batteries dying… etc. etc. etc.
But rand() is a number between 0-1, so it will never be >10
Basically this is just #define True = False