Since nuclear reactors emit neutrinos as well, there are experiments measuring the neutrino output at two different locations from a commercial power plant and compare the flux of neutrinos taking the mixing into account (as well as all the other sources, of course).
Actually, I did an internship after school with one of the groups: https://www.mpi-hd.mpg.de/lin/research_dc.en.html
After several tries, I just gave mine away, for the same reasons. There are so many boards that are a pleasure to work with, but this one was not worth the hassle.
I can recommend the replacement, a PC engines board with four Gigabit Lan ports running OpenWRT.
Go for the btrbk tool - automates snapshots, and sends / receives them incrementally via SSH to a Server, with pretty fine-grained retention settings. Awesome.
I recently converted all my Linux boxes to use BTRFS filesystems. That allows for snapshots of each sub volume, and you can even send them (incrementally) to another btrfs drive.
Last weekend I also set up btrbk, which gives you an environment to automate the process. It let's you snapshot any subvolume to a schedule you configure, and then send backups to any destination you specify via ssh, or even USB drives. Since these are incremental it uses very little bandwidth.
It even has an archive function for long term storage, and just like the other backups you can define individual retention policies for each location.
Did I mention it also supports non-btrfs support, encryption, and both host/server initiated backups? Awesome.
Next weekend I'll set up encrypted archives to the cloud...
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I use a small SoC (X10SBA from supermicro) in a mini-ITX case that fits 6 HDD drives (currently 3x3TB raid6) running Arch Linux.
The Intel celeron J1900 is more than up to the task, and you get a low powered device with which you can serve a website, have a NAS, media center, headless server, syncthing, etc.
Great experience so far and quite inexpensive device that runs 24/7.
I thought STEM is mainly a category that includes subjects that have certain principles and approaches, that are distinct from, say, humanities or art: they are based on falsifiability and mathematical theories.
So [matrix] seems to fit the bill: federated network, bridges to other services (like IRC), encryption, you can write your own client or run your own server...
Also hubzilla (nee red/matrix, unlrelated to matrix; descending from friendica which DID federate with Facebook and Twitter for a while, until FB & T closed off the federation API bridges)