CDs degrade over time and so aren’t the best way to archive data if you know you will need it again. If it’s just an ‘in case’ then it may be ok. Best bet is to buy a USB disk and then keep a second copy of it offsite. Also best practice to not use two of the same manufacturer drive.
darvocet
Not really. You could buy a kvm so you could remotely connect to that device and then select the OS you want in grub. But that is essentially connecting a monitor and keyboard.
I feel bad for the immunocompromised and the children who can’t make their own choices. I don’t feel bad for the nutbag parents who will see their children suffer with preventable diseases. I’ll even likely chuckle when I hear of a death.
I wish Dennis Reynolds would put trump in a box. A glass box.
A bit more investment and effort but the UniFi talk line has a pretty good setup for small businesses.
I want off Mr. bones wild ride.
For those wondering it’s like 3 feeder lanes, 6 regular freeway lanes, and 1 hov/toll lane on each side. When it was completed back in (est 2005) it was already outdated and fully congested duri my rush hour.
Such a sad state of affairs the world is in. I’m sad that the previous generation didn’t do anything to foster cooperation and peace. I really hope we aren’t totally fucked.
Thats my purse!
My girl is 8 and i hope she has many years left but it worries me because i love her so much more than any human.
I’m quite worried.
I run history and then clean it up so i have a guide to follow on the next setup. It’s not even so much for drive failure but to move to the newer OS versions when available.
The ‘data’ is backed up by scripts that tar folders up and scp them off to another server.