> The automatic system cooling response for third-party cards provisions airflow based on common industry PCIe requirements, regulating the inlet air to the card to a maximum of 55°C. The algorithm also approximates airflow in linear foot per minute (LFM) for the card based on card power delivery expectations for the slot (not actual card power consumption) and sets fan speeds to meet that LFM expectation. Since the airflow delivery is based on limited information from the third-party card, it is possible that this estimated airflow delivery may result in overcooling or undercooling of the card. Therefore, Dell EMC provides airflow customization for third-party PCIe adapters installed in PowerEdge platforms.
You need to use their RACADM interface to update the minimum LFM for your card.
South Koreans have realized that their alternative choice is just as corrupt, if not more.
Some of the things that have happened since:
- President Moon's right hand was convicted for opinion rigging leading up to the election by overseeing a bot farm.
- The country's chief prosecutor resigned after the administration's desperate attempt to cover up their own corruption, joined the opposition party, won the primary to become their presidential candidate, then actually winning (!) the election (as absurd as it sounds, this is roughly equivalent to Merrick Garland joining the GOP, getting nominated as their candidate, and winning the election).
> I like to see more tests moving to open-book model where test takers are allowed to use all resources, as in work.
Open-book model does not mean you're entitled to all resources, including paying someone to solve all the questions for you, or mooching answers off your peers. Cheating isn't limited to closed book exams, and to that extent, it's still an unsolved problem.
What a lot of people call "cancel culture" is exactly that, though. For example, when a comedian says something that insults a class of people who are customers of the comedian's sponsor and the sponsor projects lost revenue from that class of people, they stop funding that comedian's work.
That's both "cancel culture" and the consequences of free speech.
To clarify, I'm referring to entities that tout themselves to be a platform for providing customers to express their opinions. For your example, I think a better analogy would be a venue owner that publicly advertises their space to be rented out for events and/or performances. In such case, the owner should have no right to refuse the comedian from hosting a show even if they find them objectionable.
It's an interesting problem. If a venue owner rents to anyone, they're obligated to rent to everyone?
I can see this being complicated. One venue owner won't want to host a show because of the race/religion/ethnicity of a comedian. That would be a problem. But what if a band has a reputation for riling up crowds until they riot and tear places apart? Is it a problem for the venue owner to refuse to let them have a show? What if the potential violence isn't as direct, like the venue is threatened with a boycott if a person is allowed to hold a political rally there? Should they be allowed to deny that rally?
To clarify, you think they should face the consequence of their speech that is owners of platforms not wanting to associate with them, and you think such authors loosing their platforms is not suppression of speech? Or just one of those?
I don't know, I hear all the time about people buying things on amazon or something and when it arrives it's just crap and you can't get a refund. At the end of the day, getting a refund is not about the payment method, it is about your business relationship with the vendor.
Cryptocurrency transactions require high trust in the sense that they cannot be refunded, but they also require low trust in the sense that the vendor cannot possibly steal any more money than what you sign them.
If you are going to argue by anecdote at least use a believable anecdote. Amazon have one of the most customer friendly refund policies and always offer a refund or replacement- obviously because they are just pushing it on to their sellers but still, they do.
> Amazon have one of the most customer friendly refund policies and always offer a refund or replacement- obviously because they are just pushing it on to their sellers but still, they do.
With an open season of friendly / chargeback fraud, customer lies, refund tricks, etc which customers keep doing every day and so on which too many of that and Amazon will ban your account and they should.
Yeah, if that's the first thing that comes to their mind, then they need to look themselves in the mirror real hard and wonder whether they're the ones perpetuating xenophobia.
One of the major selling points of using cloud is serverless where it truly lets you build-once-and-forget with minimal maintenance overhead. Can you suggest comparable on-prem/Hetzner alternatives for the products I use: CloudWatch Logs, S3, DynamoDB, Kinesis Data Stream, Step Functions, Lambda, CloudFront, API Gateway, Athena? Having used these services in my day-to-day job, I just can't imagine myself ever going back to the old way of doing things.
> The automatic system cooling response for third-party cards provisions airflow based on common industry PCIe requirements, regulating the inlet air to the card to a maximum of 55°C. The algorithm also approximates airflow in linear foot per minute (LFM) for the card based on card power delivery expectations for the slot (not actual card power consumption) and sets fan speeds to meet that LFM expectation. Since the airflow delivery is based on limited information from the third-party card, it is possible that this estimated airflow delivery may result in overcooling or undercooling of the card. Therefore, Dell EMC provides airflow customization for third-party PCIe adapters installed in PowerEdge platforms.
You need to use their RACADM interface to update the minimum LFM for your card.