Don’t forget Pulse audio!
IT Nerd of 30yrs and avid hobbiest of genealogy, geology and science in general.
Don’t forget Pulse audio!
Old story: There was a sale at a big box Electronics store on Seagate Barracuda SCSI-2 Wide 9.1GB drives and I bought 6 of them to give me a 40GB RAID-5 on an old mylex dac960 scsi raid card. Bigtime storage in 1999.
Those fed my 3:1 ratio mp3 sharing site that my uunet bot advertised haha.
Sylvartas is right, it’s an old flatbed scanner.
My 1999 setup running Slackware while playing Loki’s Civ CTP
Daily Linux user since Slackware 95, news to me too lol
sorry, missed the /s, but figured the tree was still worth seeing for some.
#echo “” > $1; echo “Debutu”
Debian was first in that line. Here’s the Linux family tree
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1b/Linux_Distribution_Timeline.svg
It got too close to the Apples and was corrupted.
As NateNate60 mentioned: USB Flash. I second this as a cost effective alternative to anything else. Corsair Survivor, Sandisk Exteme Pro and Kingston DataTraveler Flash drives to 256GB are cheaper than anything else and just as reliable.
Should you want to go the SSD route, the Corsair MX500 drives purchased with any external esata or usb chassis is the most reliable option for the price.
Glad I’m not the only one haha… I am similar to you: Started on Linux with Slackware 95 distributed via Walnut Creek publishing and mailed “gasp”. make menu;make menuconfig ftw! I still use Slack at home, but am a RHEL and SuSE guy by trade.
Slackware users… You young kids, pffft.
Mexican jumping bean worm finally emerging as a moth
and yet people will still buy them.
Good list of hidden junk fees Comcast charges, but they are far from being the only ones:
https://cordcuttersnews.com/comcast-has-12-different-hidden-fees-on-its-triple-play-packages/
Pliers it is then… sigh