Totally agree with that. What I have a problem with is withholding security updates on the latest LTS releases and only releasing them on ESM. That's some scummy BS.
theit8514
Based on where the engine was afterward (about 70% down the runway), it was likely they were well above V1: the decision point speed. Above this it is unlikely that the plane can stop on the runway and it's better to get into the air and try to fix the problem. Based on some new video it looks like the middle engine was in a compressor stall and not producing full thrust. I don't know if the MD-11 (a trijet) can get into the air with only one engine.
Most distros use a generic kernel that contains drivers neeeded for basic operation. These kernels are larger than ones specially made for your hardware. Some specialized drivers like graphics may not be included but will run in a more simplified graphics mode that works for all cards.
Some consumer grade devices had unmanaged switches or hubs for their internal ports, with a single port presented to the device itself. In that case, the system can't split the ports out to have vlans on individual ports. You could still accept multiple vlans, but it would only be on the one port.
I think if you didn't assign a tag on the Release Profile it applies to all series.
Too soon.
Oh yea, I knew I forgot to cancel something after switching my gaming pc to Linux.
Flying away, or dive bombing?
Grab a deconstruction planner and add it to the filter of your merge splitter so you don't get any output on the one side. (edit: whoops, I see the ones at the top are filtered, I was talking about the one on the left)
Fun fact! Timezones don't just break at 1 hour increments. https://www.timeanddate.com/time/time-zones-interesting.html
I have never done RAID over USB, but have done various JBOD setups using SCSI. I think the general idea is that USB having such an easily disconnected connector plus the latency overhead on translating SATA to USB to SATA again means you have a higher chance of corruption. SCSI setups typically have connectors with locking mechanisms to prevent easy disconnection.
If eSATA is an option it might be better for the performance and it has a latching mechanism to prevent easy disconnection. You can get a 2-port eSATA PCI card for about 50 bucks.
Oh, and if you have a free PCI port, you could add internal SATA ports to mount the drives internally.
I think NetworkChuck has a good set of tutorial videos about self hosting. For the most part you can search for what you want to find info on and he probably had a video on it. E.g. Nginx: https://m.youtube.com/@NetworkChuck/search?query=Nginx