

Maybe you could think of it that way, but I don’t think PV cells store much charge, so they’d make pretty crappy capacitors.


Maybe you could think of it that way, but I don’t think PV cells store much charge, so they’d make pretty crappy capacitors.
Chicken, rice, and corn.


On the CPU side, the only Intel procs I’ve used are old enterprise gear for my homelab. No issues there.
On the GPU side, I’ve exclusively used Nvidia for… Actually I don’t remember the last time I used a non-nvidia GPU. The most common problem I’ve run into is updating my drivers and forgetting to reboot. the only other problem I’ve had is years back, I bought the latest gen card, and Nvidia hadn’t updated their official Linux drivers yet.
With your hardware, I’d expect things to work fine.


IIRC, there’s a harder, trusted process for measurement. But an easier method that has gained widespread adoption, and that method is what has been called into question.
Because of how wide and thin it is, it looks like a phased antenna array to me. It’s a way to create cheaper, performant antennas. You see this form factor with a bunch of RF applications in UHF to EHF range.
Here’s an example of a random mmWave radar board. Imagine a plastic case over this to keep out dust and rain.

https://www.alibaba.com/product-detail/60Ghz-long-distance-Millimeter-wave-radar_1601046927371.html
The large flat one looks like radar to me. I hadn’t heard of radar being used with PTZ cameras. But you can also use it standalone to measure traffic flow.
If it isn’t radar, it’s something with a large, flat antenna (probably a phased array). The other two options I can think of are a long-range RFID scanner or a point-to-point network connection.


Maradona with an eye patch and peg leg.


It’s the “adventure of a lifetime.”


So they can claim they don’t have authority to bring them back?


Also soy milk and almond milk.


Smart switches for the lights. We can turn off all the lights in the house from bed.


Internet access is increasingly becoming as crucial as any other utility. For some people, losing Internet might interfere with work, school, or medical devices.
It’s not “the end of the world” if my electricity is out for 5 hours, but it might cost me hundreds of dollars in spoiled food. It’s not “the end of the world” of my Internet is out for 5 hours, but it might “cost” me PTO.


Here’s the actual journal article. https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0328965
They didn’t make RAM. But they tried to see if this fungus could act as a memristor. A memristor is one of the four fundamental electrical components, along with resistors, capacitors, and inductors.
One of those tests was a volatile memory test. Think of it more like storing a single bit vs with RAM where you have an addressable space of values you can set and read.


I don’t think they actually do any weather forecasting. Last I heard, all the US weather apps are getting forecasts from the National Weather Service (part of the NOAA). I imagine it’s similar in other countries. Which makes the bait-and-switch that much more infuriating.
Not sure about Maduro-owned funds, but I read yesterday about the Bank of England freezing access to a chunk of the Venezuelan gold reserve in 2018. That action has been going through UK courts for years.


Which logs did you look at already?
If you’re using journalctl, I think you should have shutdown messages in the log. You might need to filter by the previous boot for them though (https://linuxhandbook.com/journalctl-boot-logs/).
For dmesg, you might have old, rotated logs from previous boots in your /var/logs folder.
I’d expect any logs around power management to end up in one or both of those places.
You could also try manually triggering a suspend or hibernate to see what happens. I remember having a machine that would suspend fine, but if it was suspended too long, it would hibernate. And for some reason it didn’t know how to come back up after a hibernate.


And qualified immunity in theory is a good thing. Imagine if a rich criminal brought civil lawsuits to every individual involved in prosecuting their case.
In practice, it has shielded violent cops.


I’m not sure what you’re trying to do. Do you have slow or clogged drains that you’re trying to fix? Or are you just trying to dispose of them?
If you have a drain problem, I think drain cleaner is supposed to be safe for modern pipes. But if you have old cast iron drains, it can eat through them.
If you’re trying to dispose of them, look up how your town wants you to dispose of hazardous waste. Some places will have a specific place and time you can drop off hazardous chemicals like drain cleaner.
(If you’re trying to dispose of it and don’t have access to hazardous waste removal, it is possible to neutralize the drain cleaner and safely dispose of it. But if you’re asking these sorts of questions, you aren’t qualified to do that. For anyone who might be qualified, don’t forget your PPE 😅)


Sounds like, whatever her reason, she did it on an impulse.
Remap it to escape if you’re a vim user.