On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 09:26:58PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Tixy (12022-12-26):
> > He didn't mention filesystems.
> >
> > The controller in the card would surely know what flash blocks contain
> > data, so writing the whole card first would reserve those blocks as
> > 'in-use' leaving just
Hello, everybody out there!
On 2022/12/13 at 01:06 am,
operation.privacyenforcem...@secure.mailbox.org wrote:
I have an idea to stop mass surveillance, hamper it, make routing of
traffic invisible. This is treated as impossible currently. Appreciate
feedback.
However, I have published an
On 12/15/22, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> The USA does not have a constitutional right to privacy from the
> government.
to the people you mean, right? They certainly, "responsibly" keep
that right to themselves in addition to layers of obfuscation,
secrecy, "stone walling", dilbertism, ... to
Stefan Monnier writes:
> > To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> > and with a looping script, write 1KB of 1's to the remainder of the
> > SD, erase the "bits," then 1KB of 0's, erase the "bits", and so on;
>
> I'm surprised. I would have expected uSD cards, jus
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 5:43 PM piorunz wrote:
> I was able to visit that square place. It's empty, just water, with
> abrupt cut of all land textures.
> Looks like bug in Tamriel Rebuild?
>
>
Well I am glad it is not just me then. The land to the East seems to work
fine but the land to the west
> To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> and with a looping script, write 1KB of 1's to the remainder of the
> SD, erase the "bits," then 1KB of 0's, erase the "bits", and so on;
I'm surprised. I would have expected uSD cards, just like SSDs to rely
mostly on a (
I am trying to install the "brave browser" based on their own instructions:
https://brave.com/linux/
~
sudo apt install curl
sudo curl -fsSLo /usr/share/keyrings/brave-browser-archive-keyring.gpg
https://brave-browser-apt-release.s3.brave.com/brave-browser-archive-keyring.gpg
echo "deb [signed-b
On Mon, 26 Dec 2022, Tixy wrote:
On Mon, 2022-12-26 at 20:46 +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
John Conover (12022-12-26):
So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes to
a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the
On 12/26/22 13:44, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 1:25 PM Tim Woodall wrote:
[...]
It had a 16GB sandisk microSD card although I was only using c 3GB at
the beginning.
On 21st December the kernel remounted the card ro - but (almost)
everything continued to work - my daily back
Tixy (12022-12-26):
> He didn't mention filesystems.
>
> The controller in the card would surely know what flash blocks contain
> data, so writing the whole card first would reserve those blocks as
> 'in-use' leaving just a relatively small amount of spare blocks which
> would be available for era
Nicolas George writes:
> John Conover (12022-12-26):
> > So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes to
> > a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
> >
> > To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> > and with a looping script, write 1KB o
> John Conover (12022-12-26):
> > So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes
> > to a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
> >
> > To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1
> > KB, and with a looping script, write 1KB of 1's to the remainder
On Mon, 2022-12-26 at 20:46 +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> John Conover (12022-12-26):
> > So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes to
> > a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
> >
> > To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> > and
John Conover (12022-12-26):
> So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes to
> a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
>
> To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> and with a looping script, write 1KB of 1's to the remainder of the
> SD,
Tim Woodall writes:
>
> Do these cards have wear levelling? Have I just got unlucky that it's
> the start of the card that is unwriteable and so I cannot continue on
> the 12GB of space that has never been part of a partition?
>
Almost all SD cards from the major manufacturers in the last 5 years
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 1:25 PM Tim Woodall wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> It had a 16GB sandisk microSD card although I was only using c 3GB at
> the beginning.
>
> On 21st December the kernel remounted the card ro - but (almost)
> everything continued to work - my daily backups take a snapshot (which
> fa
This is only tangentially related to debian.
I have a really old rpi (2B model I think) running stock bullseye acting
as an access point and also a backup route to another wifi AP.
This all works beautifully and has run smoothly for a long time.
It had a 16GB sandisk microSD card although I was
On 26/12/2022 18:05, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
All,
Is anyone successfully running Tamriel Rebuilt 22.11 with Tamriel Data
version 9? I tried both openMW 0.48RC4 and 0.47, packaged in testing,
but neither populates the landmass to the west, the north and part of
the south is missing. I tho
All,
Is anyone successfully running Tamriel Rebuilt 22.11 with Tamriel Data
version 9? I tried both openMW 0.48RC4 and 0.47, packaged in testing, but
neither populates the landmass to the west, the north and part of the south
is missing. I thought maybe it might be a load order problem so I set th
Le lundi 26 décembre 2022, 16:51:56 CET Jean-François Bachelet a écrit :
> Hello ^^)
>
> Le 26/12/2022 à 16:05, Olivier Back my spare a écrit :
> > Bonjour
> >
> > Est-il possible de faire un NAS serveur de fichier SMB NFS SFTP + LDAP
> > avec un Debian?
> > J'ai acheté un nouvel ordinateur pour
On 12/26/22 08:44, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 08:15:55AM -0500, gene heskett wrote:
Greetings all;
Hi Gene :)
debian bullseye, on a i5 machine, uptodate a/o yesterday.
trying to build marlin for a newer board in a 3d printer, static blew the
Robin Nano 1.2 board that d
On 26.12.2022 18:15, gene heskett wrote:
Greetings all;
...
One path involves Visual Studio which does not seem to be available
for debian, so it appears the platformio path is the one to follow.
But step by step instructions are pretty slim.
Can anyone help get me started?
I don't have any
On Mon, Dec 26, 2022 at 08:15:55AM -0500, gene heskett wrote:
> Greetings all;
>
Hi Gene :)
> debian bullseye, on a i5 machine, uptodate a/o yesterday.
> trying to build marlin for a newer board in a 3d printer, static blew the
> Robin Nano 1.2 board that drove a two trees sapphire 5 plus. The
Greetings all;
debian bullseye, on a i5 machine, uptodate a/o yesterday.
trying to build marlin for a newer board in a 3d printer, static blew
the Robin Nano 1.2 board that drove a two trees sapphire 5 plus. The
blown board has been replaced with a newer Robin Nano 3.1 board, with
TMC2209 mot
Greg Wooledge (12022-12-24):
> 2) export LC_ALL=C
I have considered suggesting this, but some locales are required for
programs to work correctly (LC_CTYPE), and some other locales might be
the cause for the issue and disabling them would make debugging harder.
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
si
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