

That’s median.


That’s median.


Well, in a few million years the sun will burn out, and we won’t have any choice but to migrate.
Emacs opening when you hit a mailto link is still an annoyance.


Fixed yesterday, see update.


A large amount of tech was based by people and enterprises who emigrated from Russia and are no longer bound by their laws.


They no longer need them, they are profitable by themselves now.


Troublesome; can’t be automated.


Yeah, already solved, check the update. Mode was set to RAID over AHCI for some reason.


Tokens are well-defined groups of bytes ranged by frequency of occurrence in texts to efficiently translate them into a sequence of 32 or 64-bit binary integers, an LLM-optimised form if compression. They are well-known, you can play with them here: https://gpt-tokenizer.dev/


Cryptozoologists are in shambles


Open world, ending and moddable games with huge modding communities are the best bet


Well, the internet runs on encryption. If the algorithm behind HTTPS is cracked, no conventional data storage service is safe. Overall I’m quite confident modern post-quantum encryption is quite secure for the task.
As for the legal staff, well, PeerTube works the same by sending arbitrary content through your device and no one got in trouble.


That was one way I was thinking to handle this. As I don’t have friends, I had to think of some other ones.
One way to confirm participation is to require participants to regularly calculate and send to other hosts hashes of stored chunks + random strings that were generated by the chunk owner in advance and were unknown to the peer before a given point in time. They would confirm to the network they still have the file daily, if they won’t verify it for 14 days other peers would be liberated from an obligation to store files they uploaded.


Don’t recall doing so. I think I saw something about automatic switch to/from RAID and AHCI in boot logs?
I’ve actually seen “something/AHCI/RAID” switch in BIOS set to RAID. Will try switching to AHCI.
Edit: IT WORKED! I changed RAID to AHCI, now the system boots as expected. Thank you. Will change to solved.


I don’t think I changed anything relevant in the bios, I’m always quite careful with changing things there. Maybe I changed boot order to test live USBs a couple times. Reboots are frequent due to system crashes.
Also also, is it possible you have two disks, and grub is on one and your data is on the other? Again, kinda weird question, but it’s a kinda weird situation…
No, only one drive. I tried removing this drive, and it failed to get to GRUB. Plus, the rescue mode on Windows partition on the same drive that boots sees it’s own 200 GB of files, they are definitely can’t be anywhere but on 512 GB SSD.


It appears the time was broken, the logs were new.
Here are logs from the live USB, this link expires in 2 weeks, I will preserve it if you’ll find anything relevant there: https://termbin.com/975x
NVMe


I think I tested the SSD-out scenario without live in.
Only USB drive itself shows under by-id. I don’t have a Windows install USB, the windows I talked about is a partition on the broken disk. It does see the Linux partition with DiskPart but can’t mount it or extract files from BTRFS.
LSPCI lists many cryptic names, “RAID bus controller” sounds like the most promising one. https://termbin.com/287u


No, fdisk shows only the drive itself.
I didn’t find any obvious errors in dmesg logs, but again I don’t know much about them. You may check them out here: https://termbin.com/975x
Can you encode them as base64 URL?