The difference between a purported nation-state backed subversion of supply chain and manufacturing lines, and poor security in the firmware of the BMC, is still night and day though, and still not what the original…
Using x2go means you get a persistent desktop: your apps are left running when you close the session, and you can resume where you left off when you reconnect.
Sure. Can you see the email in my profile?
Drive vendors are now publishing per-year write workloads for drives. EG, datacentre-grade SATA and near-line SAS drives like the WD RE (https://www.wdc.com/en-um/products/business-internal-storage...) and Seagate…
The article is wrong on this point, and on Intel's intentions, as far as I can tell. Intel has a "Supernova" feature (http://itpeernetwork.intel.com/data-integrity-in-solid-state...) which will cause some drive models…
"SSDs though, they just disappear from the bus when they fail" This isn't always true, and actually shouldn't ever be true - it's a particular failure mode you're seeing, and while it appears to be one common across a…
The difference between a purported nation-state backed subversion of supply chain and manufacturing lines, and poor security in the firmware of the BMC, is still night and day though, and still not what the original…
Using x2go means you get a persistent desktop: your apps are left running when you close the session, and you can resume where you left off when you reconnect.
Sure. Can you see the email in my profile?
Drive vendors are now publishing per-year write workloads for drives. EG, datacentre-grade SATA and near-line SAS drives like the WD RE (https://www.wdc.com/en-um/products/business-internal-storage...) and Seagate…
The article is wrong on this point, and on Intel's intentions, as far as I can tell. Intel has a "Supernova" feature (http://itpeernetwork.intel.com/data-integrity-in-solid-state...) which will cause some drive models…
"SSDs though, they just disappear from the bus when they fail" This isn't always true, and actually shouldn't ever be true - it's a particular failure mode you're seeing, and while it appears to be one common across a…