You are right. I missed the bend synology, and a crucial word in a sentence… Enough forums for me for today!
Nothing else is distorted, perhaps it was indeed sat on
You are right. I missed the bend synology, and a crucial word in a sentence… Enough forums for me for today!
Nothing else is distorted, perhaps it was indeed sat on
Ah, yes. Quite.
Didn’t think to zoom into the thing
It’s just how these new 50 cameras phones take pictures in wide angular. The objects far from the center look bent. A small fish eye effect.
If it was bent, it wouldn’t fit properly in the rack rails.
No problem, because as you can see, the rack is wider on top, so a bent or smaller device just finds its optimal height and fits nicely
The day when trapezoidal racks rule the server world .
Other thing bothers me… why that Noctua cooler is diagonal to the case?
And @Ottetal, why are you mixing DeWalt with Bosch? Why use 2 charger systems?
@kosti11 - Yes, the Synology unit on top is bent. The top plastic part is flush, but the metal cage holding the four caddies are sagging 2ish mm near the middle. Why is this happening? Probably because I use the synology as a shelf, and have had more weight on it than I have now.
@ACarneiro - original UDM Pro
@arrogantrabbit - You’re right in all of your assumptions And I agree on your statement on the rs819.
@snorkel - That is a neat eye! I got the belt sander as a gift, and purchased the screwing machine myself. The Noctua cooler on the CPU is mounted correctly, but while I was toying with RAM overclocks, I needed additional cooling on the memorychips, hence the randomly thrown in cooler.
All of my gear is in the broom closet, and with the door closed it can get a bit toasty.
So I assume when you go hiking, the backpack is yours and the basket is caried by the wife? Or vice versa?
Hah! Close, basket is for picnics on the cargo bike, backpack is indeed for hikes in conjunction with the walking sticks hanging from the shelf.
If we just could take a better look at the little Picasso’s artistic manifestations…
@andrew2.hart - The rucksack is definitely some kind of StorJ when I’m out walking, lol
@snorkel - I know how this goes, in 3-46 posts time, you’ll have a complete scan of my appartment, hahahah.
/weird installations mode on/
I have one more server with
16x16Tb Seagate Exos X16 ST16000NM001G
2x1.92Tb Samsung PM893 and 2*480Gb Intel SSDSC2BB480G6
Today I was touch the one of ssd’s and my pool is fall in degraded mode (you can see messsages on the screen ) luckily it resilvered quickly.
This server is currently in the final stages of rolling out metadata. As you can see, 2 SSDs are inserted into the back of the motherboard, to which datasets are sent using zfs send, and after that it copied back to the disks using rsync, so that the metadata is lay to a special device consists of four other ssds connected by sata cables
I don’t know what to do with this wealth, how to ennoble it better)
my blog in telegram:
…well, first step would be to make it flood proof, by lifting it from the ground.
Second, I’ll get rid off that isolating foam. It keeps the heat inside. Just let the air to flow allaround the drives.
With a wooden floor like that, I would imagine that foam would be mostly for sound dampening. All that vibration resonating on floor boards must get quite interesting in the middle of the night…
It is linoleum, not wooden floor
And this is not a residential building at all
What are you booting off? An SD card? I’m using the HC4’s.
I stand humbly corrected
So, playing devil’s advocate here. If Storj clients visited the forum and saw such a rig, what should their impression be of the way their data is handled?
This is only a one piece from 80 for the one segment.
But to recover the customer need only 29.
Again, if they want to have SOC2, they can do now for an additional price.
Why don’t you ask what mining rigs might look like, even if the user is using the billions of dollars worth of cryptocurrency supported by such rigs? maybe they don’t care?
The one strapped on the garage ceiling steals the first place, though.