The CPU in this has no pins, is just contacts on the chip. The pins are in the motherboard, like the new 7000 series Ryzen.
The CPU in this has no pins, is just contacts on the chip. The pins are in the motherboard, like the new 7000 series Ryzen.
I’d run XFCE themed with Chicago95 in this everyday.
What the fuck did I just read?
You’d be surprised to know that a 500GB hard drive can be theoretically copied in 1 year with a 16kb/s transfer.
Dell enterprise series of desktops (Optiplex and Precision) are upgradeable with off the shelf parts. The CPU, RAM, SSD, GPU, Network cards, etc. The same way a regular motherboard from any manufacturer does.
For example an Intel Core 8th gen system would POST with any 8th Gen CPU, any type of DDR4 ram and would boot from any disk. You cannot upgrade an 8th gen to a 12th or 14th gen from any brand, the only proprietary properties of these systems are the case or motherboard form factor and the power connectors.
Do you have a spare set up where you can boot up from that same SSD? Literally any laptop would work plug and play and that would rule out the possibility of it being the motherboard on the OP.
I don’t get it, is python dying?
I mean OpenWRT runs and actively releases new software for those late 90s hardware.
But that’s two keys! End or Home is a single press.
Seconding this, Dell has excellent support for Linux on their enterprise laptops (Latitude and Precision). XPS are another breed, and tend to be marketed as a ultrabook or a MacBook competition.
I’ve had that happen on EndeavourOS but it was because of a corrupted ISO. Have you checked checksums?
I hate it, basically I have to force myself when I boot into windows to physically disconnect the RJ45 from the back, so it doesn't replace the boot entries thru an update.
Not if they use GNU nano or that shitty windows notepad.
Why is it that long when shutdown -p -f works great?