

5G was mostly about cramming more connections into the spectrum and expanding broadcast range (as well as some other things), but it wasn’t just about node speed on the network.


5G was mostly about cramming more connections into the spectrum and expanding broadcast range (as well as some other things), but it wasn’t just about node speed on the network.


If you ever need more reasons to avoid Ubuntu…


Or set fire to delicate fabrics, wallpaper, or other potentially flammable surfaces a mosquito might be near or on.


In which case, an app on a phone is still much easier. Plenty of privacy-respecting apps out there that handle wake words, STT, and IFTTT actions. Just seems a much easier route than trying to shoehorn it via HA when that’s not even it’s general use-case.


A phone seems like an easier solution, but there are VOIP integrations for HA, as well as ways to stream audio through the media player to different devices. I’m not aware of any integration that specifically does paging as you describe, but it would be easy to do with an esp32 board with a speaker.


Shattered Pixel Dungeon, OpenTTD, or Tux Kart.
These spam accounts are getting old…


I don’t think it could possibly be measured because it’s something like: (file size ÷ block size) * num_writes
So it entire depends on the types of files, how often you’re utilizing writes to disk…etc. I just wouldn’t worry about it. If you REALLY want to estimate the tax: use iostat to check the number of writes on the drive in the last 24 hours, THEN enable online defrag and check it again in 24 hours. See what the difference is.
It really doesn’t matter for HDD though. Barely probably matters for SSD.


It should be a default, but I can see why it would be disabled for SSDs to prevent using cycles unnecessarily. If you’re using HDDs, check and see if it’s enabled.
Either way, unless you’re REALLY needing some minor performance improvements out of your disks, it shouldn’t make a huge difference.


Oops, you’re right. ZFS doesn’t have that.


There is no “normal” amount of fragmentation on modern filesystems that do things like CoW. That’s kind of the point.
If you’re reading and writing large files with a consistent amount of I/O, you’re going to have a higher amount of fragmentation because of the nature of CoW. This is by design. This doesn’t mean anything is wrong with the filesystem, just that peak performance soon after writing is not achieved. Btrfs and ZFS do online defrag and deferred scheduling of tasks for it to allow for EVENTUAL consistency as far as contiguous block forms go. The more free space you have, the sooner it will become cleaner.


Possibly NTSYNC changes finally being let off the leash.


If you’re this lacking in confidence of your skills, you may have other issues to work out…


Lolol.
Your last line. Saying exactly what I’m saying, dawg.


Can’t do either of those things, so way to waste everyone’s time and effort.


We haven’t. Many states have new laws on the books about this issue, and others on the horizon. The issue is that they approved at one point, so there will most likely be a grandfather clause for existing ones on the road because you can’t force car manufacturers to go back and recall all these things to be retroactively compliant with a new law at cost to them. Not how laws work.


💯 it will render absolutely any site flawlessly, yup.


Amazing. It can ingest ANY website, and flawlessly render all content faster than any other browser converts to text. Built-in Ad and Content Blocking too!
FEX has been an Open Source project for quite some time. Valve has a use-case for it, so has been contributing developer resources and funding for the project, but Valve themselves did not create it. It’s simply a useful tool in a pivot they want to make for their portable gaming devices and expansion.