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I might be mistaken, but I thought it was in every non pentium/celeron/atom chip after 2010 and every chip after 2015 with some extensions.

My desktop and laptop have them and they're mid-high end but not upper high end.


Scala is largely a set of iterative improvements with a syntax that's designed to handle data workflows well. It's not a big deal, it's not that exciting, it doesn't use all of the latest technologies, and that's why I think it has a bright future.


This doesn't address closures vs objects at all.


Which is where they'll remain.

(snark begets snark)


NSA is not the primary threat here. More conventional legal mechanisms are. Home serving is just as vulnerable to the NSA.


Conventional legal mechanisms against your home server cabinet can be handled via full disk encryption and a reed switch on your cabinet door connected to your power strip.


Sounds fun until you have to open your cabinet door for legit reasons like swapping a faulty hard drive in your RAID array.


Huh? If you're going to swap a faulty hard drive you want to power off anyway.


I hotswap drives all the time, it's not a problem and makes a harddrive swap a 30 second task instead of a 10 minute task and doesn't incur downtime either.


Most consumer hard drives (and indeed bays) are not designed for hotswapping and it can cause damage (though maybe modern build quality is good enough that you'd be lucky most of the time). "Downtime" on your home server in your closet is a minor inconvenience at worst.


The SATA connectors are designed for hotswapping, the ground leads are longer than the others so you get nice properties when connecting and disconnecting. I'd be mildly concerned about properly stopping the drive that's being disconnected, except it's probably being disconnected to be replaced. I don't see much difference between connecting a drive and turning the power on to an already connected drive.


I use NAS Harddrives which are built for hotswapping. I have no idea why anybody would use a consumer harddrive in a RAID Array, the price difference is 10€ at best AFAIK.


For a home server what's the benefit you're paying for though? I don't need max performance (I use RAID for redundancy rather than anything else), and a little downtime when I replace a disk isn't an issue.


If you have several drives in the same bay, you're going to get vibrations that severely reduce lifetime of the harddrive. NAS Drives also have much better electronics/mechanics to help them not crash all your data while in use. They won't try to heroically save that one sector and report to your RAID controller instead, meaning you get a much better overview of harddrive defects and lastly

Lastly, NAS Drives have a much lower error rate than Desktop drives due to the usage of higher quality heads that increase error resistance and lifetime.


You want NAS drives for TLER and vibration tolerance.


Once upon a time, the woman stayed at home and didn't need a second car.

Televisions were prohibitively priced as to make one even a stretch.

And, travel was prohibitively priced so that only the ultra-rich could afford planes. When cars hit the scene en masse, it brought rise to car trips.

So, I guess you're saying people aren't living within their means? But they weren't necessarily then either... And boy, I sure miss all of the great stuff from the 50s.


> Televisions were prohibitively priced as to make one even a stretch.

It's just astounding how cheap televisions have become. A 32" flatscreen is like $150, and weighs ten pounds.


Whereas content is $100/month when it used to be $0.


Broadcast TV is still free. Movies always cost a fair amount of money.

An internet connection with youtube is $30 which is WAY more variety than "back then".


Mmm. Yeah, I get loads of value from Univision and Home Shopping Channels like HSN, QVC and the others.

Can't forget Qubo and Me.tv. Good times, for sure.


CBS, NBC, ABC, FOX, PBS

Also, I'm suspecting you're not a Spanish speaker, so I guess it's okay to discount a channel that over 10% of the US has utility for.

Cable TV is a relatively recent invention, has quickly declining subscription rates, and has always been billed as premium.


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