From what I understand (may be wrong) this is exactly the reason that they stopped allowing Linux installs on PS3s.
People were buying them just for this purpose. However, the consoles were sold at a discount because Sony expected users to buy games, controllers, etc. If someone bought a PS3 alone, without anything else then Sony lost money.
I think it's beta for a reason. I just tried the appimage for their latest release and it's behaving in the same broken way that I remember.
I have a multi-monitor setup with different size & resolution screens, so that may be a factor for the problems I'm having. Really hope it'll work someday.
The water used by data centers are either closed loop, meaning that they recirculate a set amount of water.. or the water evaporates, and my understandingis they don't use potable water for those systems. I might be wrong, but I don't think data centers aren't destroying potable water.
The water is reutilized, a big reason is the difficuty to filter new incoming water because of impurities and uncertainty about quality (e.g. winter times make the river water very muddy and difficult to filter).
Second because is because adding water is a cost, whereas reuse existing water is simpler and saves money. There are always losses of water, however these are neglectible.
Not mentioned here but for more extreme cases of devices cooling is done with distilled water (zero minerals) and the whole device works submerged under this water, the hot water isn't thrown away because it distilled water takes a lot of effort to remove the minerals and effort to keep them out, so the closed loop is very efficient.
Here's one in Oregon from today's San Francisco newspaper. If they recycle, it's still loses enough equivalent to 4000 people a year. Maybe that's worth it, but it reads like it's not enough for their future plans. It's not like the city population in question has changed that much historically so there's some future expansion of something planned. That water sounds very pristine since they are going to have to take over national park land.
https://www.sfgate.com/national-parks/article/mount-hood-wat...
You're not wrong. In a worst case scenario I resort to using strace to figure out where a program is reading config from.. from what I understand, if this kernel module is in use then even that approach wouldn't help.
But since the use case is personal dotfiles, I imagine the user isn't going to forget that they set this up.
It's close, but there are some missing pieces I think. The way it manages storage pools would fit your use case, if you import a zpool, for example, it will scan the datasets and can figure out what zvols should be attached to which VMs..
but there's also VM config info under `/etc/pve` or something similar. I'm pretty sure that's some kind of FUSE filesystem, it's supposed to be synchronized between cluster members.. you might be able to host that externally somehow. But that'll probably take some effort.
You'll also need to figure out how to configure `/etc/network/interfaces` on boot for your network config. But that's doable.
I really like the Python + Qt/pyside combination. I can whip together a rough GUI using QtCreator and then write the app logic in Python super quickly.
I’m sure it would be a goto if I made gui apps more regularly, because it’s clearly the more robust solution. So far wxglade is great for a drag-and-drop designer and the code is just enough closer to the regular Python way of doing things that it’s one less thing to learn.
People were buying them just for this purpose. However, the consoles were sold at a discount because Sony expected users to buy games, controllers, etc. If someone bought a PS3 alone, without anything else then Sony lost money.
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