17%
02.02.2012
to the end of the URL after the slash so rather than bit.ly/R4c6feh
, you could instead use bit.ly/dictionaryword
. Another feature some services offer is the ability to edit the destination URL at a later
17%
12.03.2015
).
Benchmark results are usually expressed in terms of how much (wall clock) time it takes to run and in GFLOPS (10^9 floating point operations per second) or MFLOPS (10^6 floating point operations per second
17%
14.01.2016
3700 IOPS: 15,900
Optane IOPS: 70,300 (4.42x)
P3700 latency: 58µ
Optane latency: 9µ (6.44x)
Test 2
P3700 IOPS: 13,400
Optane IOPS: 95,600 (7.13x)
P3700
17%
22.09.2016
.
Testing with Linux
You can test NVDIMM on a Linux system as of kernel 4.1, but versions 4.6 or later are recommended. If you like, you can emulate NVDIMM hardware without the physical hardware using Qemu
17%
14.06.2017
You can experiment with all of them to find the one that compresses the most, the fastest, or according to whatever metric you value.
SquashFS has been in the kernel for a long time (since 2.6
17%
13.10.2020
:
The serial fraction can be broken into two parts (Equation 6), where s
B is the base serial fraction that is not a function of the number of processors, and s
C is the communication time between processors
17%
03.02.2024
938G 718G 173G 81% /home
/dev/nvme0n1p1 511M 6.1M 505M 2% /boot/efi
/dev/sda1 5.5T 3.1T 2.1T 60% /home2
192.168.4.100:/home
17%
17.02.2015
. Project Atomic [6] and CoreOS [7] [8] are perfect examples of this trend. CoreOS is a naked Linux distribution that only supports one thing really well: the operation of Docker containers (see the "Core
17%
10.04.2015
).
Benchmark results are usually expressed in terms of how much (wall clock) time it takes to run and in GFLOPS (10^9 floating point operations per second) or MFLOPS (10^6 floating point operations per second
17%
16.08.2018
line. The AADRM PowerShell module [6] is available for this purpose. Before you get started, you need to connect the PowerShell session to AIP using the
Connect-AadrmService
cmdlet (Figure 2). Without