please report any undocumented features so that they may be deported out of your cavities
Just do half hour first day, then full hour next day
It went pretty well, I thought it would fill it up all in one go but I had to vacuum out a few times and let some water go in, then vacuum some more and let water go in.
I ran a benchmark to compare how it did before and after and the water block kept the GPU like 20 degrees cooler and the cpu almost 10 degrees cooler even though the cpu is still air cooled
Yeah in this case it would have been a classroom
Great cross post for !sideoftheroad@possumpat.io
I would have liked to know if it snows so that I won't move there
For those mega poops that overflow
Adobe still has lifetime purchases?
that made me chuckle outta control kookily
she probably just wants you to stop racking up the electric bill
As long as it's instant then it's not that bad I guess
So when you enable proton in steam is it the same?
Would you not put murdering vagrants under hobbies?
I was kind of surprised that comet that's been visible at night was only discovered like a year ago. Crazy to think that would be the warning time of anything coming to hit us
But you're asleep and next thing you know someone is punching your face and now you can't see because you have fists in your eyes plus you probably have a seat belt on and you can't get it off because your hands are probably trying to shield you
cross-posted from: https://possumpat.io/post/6398015
> Hello everyone, I need a bit of help trying to make sure my idea makes sense. > Long story short I am converting my PC from air cooled to liquid cooled and need some help with filling up the coolant and avoiding air bubbles. > > My idea is to use a brake bleeder to vacuum out the air from the custom loop then fill the loop with coolant. > > !overview > *** > !fill bucket > The first step is to have a bucket of coolant up high on a shelf so that gravity helps fill the whole system. > I will submerge the hose with the valve open to let out any air in the hose, then close the valve and lift out that end of the hose and connect it to the Y splitter. > This way there is no air in the first hose from the bucket. That alone I think would be enough to start pulling the coolant through and fill the case because of the suction and gravity. > *** > !vacuum air > The second step would be to use the brake bleeder to vacuum out the air of the whole system. I am thinking like 10-15 psi should be good depending how much the soft hoses bend. > Once the air is out I will close the valve to the vacuum and slowly open the valve to the coolant to start filling the system. > > *** > !coolant fill > I connected the fill hose to a nipple fitting at the top of the reservoir/pump combo, and I connected the outlet port to the GPU block at the bottom. > I imagine it will pull the coolant to the GPU first as coolant falls into the reservoir, then through the radiator, and then back to the inlet port at the top. It will fill up above where the inlet tube is so that it is submerged to prevent any bubbles in the future as coolant is pumped through. > *** > > > !pump > My concerns are that normally you connect the inlet and outlet to the bottom of the water pump, and if needed there are additional inlet ports on the top of the reservoir. > I'm not sure if it matters that I use the top inlet only. The reason I switched to the top port was to try and make it make sense in my head on how the water would be sucked through when filling to avoid any air pockets in the radiator if it got sucked in from both ends. > > !car > The second concern is that my radiator is above the reservoir, on a car you usually fill the system from the top point on the radiator which is the highest spot. > It seems confusing to me on the PC to fill it from a lower point. I think vacuuming out the air will help with any issues but I'm not 100% sure. > > > ::: spoiler info > I got the idea because a hose on my car recently failed so I started looking up videos on how to fill the coolant as I heard having bubbles can cause overheating, and using a vacuum seems to be the way to go. > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1beZZCBUnt0 > > I then started searching online on how to do the same thing for a PC and found some videos of people recently trying this, but it seems they both had some issues so I wanted to overcome that before trying it myself. > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsJkmJMeL4w > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLu9RgmwzTU > > I found this video in my research in trying to understand how liquid and gravity work which gave me the idea to have the fill bucket up high. > !siphon > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZmP0vsRBZ8 > ::: >
Hello I switched to Linux a few months ago and one thing I liked doing in the past is run bench marks with 3dmark to compare my systems as time goes on with the changes I make.
I learned about phoronix test suite and it looks exactly like what I need but I'm having some trouble in finding a way to compare my systems to other people's similar setups.
So far I got something like
Monitor=cpu.usage,cpu.temp,gpu.usage,gpu.temp phoronix-test-suite benchmark unigine-heaven
But then I only see the tests that I run, does anyone know what test and the command to ve able to compare other people's systems on openbenchmarking.org
On March 26, 1997, deputies of the San Diego County Sheriff's Office discovered the bodies of the 39 active members of the group, including Applewhite, in a house in the San Diego suburb of Rancho Santa Fe. They had participated in a coordinated series of ritual suicides, coinciding with the closest approach of Comet Hale–Bopp.
Just before the mass suicide, the group's website was updated with the message: "Hale–Bopp brings closure to Heaven's Gate ...our 22 years of classroom here on planet Earth is finally coming to conclusion – 'graduation' from the Human Evolutionary Level. We are happily prepared to leave 'this world' and go with Ti's crew."
their website is still up heavensgate.com
the wiki wiki
I boarded and took a ship during a quest and flew to New Atlantis. I saved the game and stopped playing for the night only to find the ship left me when I loaded up that save the next day.
I currently have an Unraid server running at home for my personal files as well as some game servers and as a media server.
I have a second machine that I use at a different location that has VPN setup to home so I can work on my projects remotely. I would like to use the second machine to also take backups of my personal files and my docker configs etc.
the second machine is running Pop!OS currently and I have several drives installed. the Issue is I was trying to create a storage pool with ZFS but apparently Pop!OS is like the only distro that doesnt like ZFS.
should I re-image my remote machine to another OS? or should I try and create a pool with something else? I have two 6TB drives and three 2TB drives that I can use, I have some more installed on there but dont really need that much space.
I used to use windows on my second machine and would just connect my shares from unraid as smb and backup with bvckup2 to a windows storage space of all the drives combined. Now I switched to linux and would like to do something similar.
My idea was to combine the similar drives into vdevs and a big pool with ZFS then run luckybackup but that derailed when I tried and failed because of Pop!OS
San Francisco resident Randol White says he heard the noises for the first time about two weeks ago -- he was woken up around 4 a.m. to the Waymos honking at each other.