most AVR, automatic voltage regulators, won’t allow for rapid switching on and off.
Actively cooled UPSes, especially the ones that do more active double conversions, absolutely always have the fan on.
most AVR, automatic voltage regulators, won’t allow for rapid switching on and off.
Actively cooled UPSes, especially the ones that do more active double conversions, absolutely always have the fan on.
PCU: power conditioner unit?
VRU: voltage regulator unit?
While the UPS does have lots of upside, there are some downsides to consider:
Battery is a consumable, off gas venting, perhaps active cooling fan noise
It’s a dichotomy. You have to decide what’s more important. Showing support for a niche game maker, or saving money and getting a stable version of the game.
oh interesting, what reasons make the ups safer?
It doesn’t sound like you need a UPS. It sounds like you needed automatic voltage regulator.
It’ll condition the power so it’s clean, and if it’s not clean it’ll cut the power off.
Many good UPS’s have a voltage regulator built in, but then you have the hassle the battery and everything. Up to you depends on what’s easier to find for you locally
oh no! Not Johnny drop tables!
Do you think you will buy this esim sim card?
this is super cool ! i kinda want to get it, but I don’t have a direct need for it.
I wish it was possible to export esims
I just finished this, yes it took me a month.
I found his literary style, very compelling, it was a fun read.
I found his predictions while interesting, not very clairvoyant. BeOS is sadly no longer with us.
I did like his tie-in to the Church of the simulation at the end, though this predates the official organization of such an church.
I think it was a thought-provoking essay, I disagreed with some aspects of this predictions, especially around what a monopoly is. It’s thought-provoking. It’s a good read. It is not gospel
He did talk about hacker culture, and anybody being able to fix anything, but was not able to make the connection between BeOS and proprietary license and Linux with an open license. The death of BOS followed one year from the creation of this essay
cohost is a social media microblogging platform
Dreaming of your code when sleeping.
AAAA : on the rails open world where you can only do a few pre-approved actions.
Emergent gameplay is for Indies
The issue isn’t the software has limited support, the issue is the software doesn’t get open sourced when support ends.
if it isn’t meant for me, that’s totally fine.
That also means it’s not my fault when the thing that isn’t meant for me doesn’t get a audience, right? Right?
If you want a hands off linux experience
Ditto
k8s cluster + nix flakes
True, it was a really well done clone, but it was well done. The game worked. It wasn’t terribly buggy.
My favorite theory is internal politics meant that the people who knew it was going to fail couldn’t prevent the game from going live without extreme cost to themselves. And they would be blamed for it.
Letting the game go live, was probably the least politically expensive thing for them to do. Even though everybody knew the outcome
Cattle! Not pets!
I actually do this. Rotate food down one shelf every week. Bottom shelf goes into the trash