

These little buggers are loud, right?
These little buggers are loud, right?
What a fucking dumbass. I’m sorry, but he really doesn’t know how dumb he’s being.
Well I’m glad I could brighten your day. Nothing like a good laugh, eh. Take care.
I missed it skimming the article. It’s a good thing having it in the thread, so thanks for doing the work.
Working well doing what?
If you have a 500 watt PC, for example, it uses 500Wh, per hour. Or 12kWh in a day.
A maximum of 500 watts. Fortunately your PC doesn’t actually max out your PSU or your system would crash.
The dump truck, at 45 tons, ascends the 13-percent grade and takes on 65 tons of ore. With more than double the weight going back down the hill, the beast’s regenerative braking system recaptures more than enough energy to refill the charge the eDumper used going up.
Still on Flathub though.
I’m sure Denmark has hurt you greatly and will do so again, but the ownership is 60/40 between Sweden and Denmark. PostNord operates the same in Denmark as it does in Sweden.
What does ‘user device access’ mean?
This one is tricky, because Lemmy hates both Musk and AI.
It’s one of the Gnome default wallpapers
“Testing” in case they decide they don’t like money after all.
Pictured: Teenagers
Isn’t this more of a consequence of reddit’s user count? How is Lemmy less vulnerable to bots?
Now that there is an old Dell Inspiron. I had one with that shell ca. 2006.
Do bubbles burst?
I also just meant given the size constraints in tiny performance PCs. More friction in tighter spaces means the fans work harder to push air. CPU/GPU fans are positioned closer to the fan grid than on larger cases. And larger cases can even have a bit of insulation to absorb sound better. So, without having experimented with this myself, I would expect a particularly small and particularly powerful (as opposed to efficient) machine to be particularly loud under load. But yes, we’ll have to see.