39%
14.08.2020
is: In smartctl database [for details use: -P show]
ATA Version is: ACS-2, ATA8-ACS T13/1699-D revision 4c
SATA Version is: SATA 3.1, 6.0 Gb/s (current: 6.0 Gb/s)
Local Time is: Sun Aug 2 10:41:21 2020 EDT
SMART
39%
05.12.2014
DHCP exist: one from 4:00am and one from 3:00pm. With the bro-cut command, I can determine that the earliest assignment by the rogue server was at 4:04am and assigned the address 192.168.1.27 (Listing 7
39%
30.11.2025
combinations are supported:
ShadowProtect 4.0.1: Oracle VirtualBox 3.1.0--3.2.6
ShadowProtect 4.0.5: Oracle VirtualBox 3.1.0--3.2.12
ShadowProtect 4.1: Oracle VirtualBox 3.1.0--4.0.4
Shadow
39%
26.01.2025
's Perlmutter Supercomputer. IEEE, 2024: DOI 10.1109/SCW63240.2024.00180: https://conferences.computer.org/sc-wpub/pdfs/SC-W2024-6oZmigAQfgJ1GhPL0yE3pS/555400b391/555400b391.pdf
Open OnDemand: https
39%
04.08.2020
],e[11][1-with_goat->2],v[2],e[12][2-empty_return->3],v[3],e[18][3-with_cabbage->9],v[9],e[19][9-with_goat->10],v[10],e[20][10-with_wolf->6],v[6],e[16][6-empty_return->7],v[7],e[17][7-with_goat->8],v[8
39%
03.08.2023
7236f7b5c3dd2f75672c3d2b8dfd4df3a3eea6-silicon-heatwave-the-looming-change-in-data-center-climates.pdf
Tape storage and carbon emissions: https://www.backupworks.com/tape-storage-reduce-energy-consumption-and-carbon-emissions.aspx
39%
12.02.2014
.py
CPU ALL: 1.0 %
CPU0 4.1%
CPU1 2.0%
CPU2 0.0%
CPU3 0.0%
CPU4 0.0%
CPU5 0.0%
CPU6 0.0%
CPU7 2.0%
CPU ALL:
user: 0.7% nice: 0.0%
system: 0.2% idle
39%
14.03.2013
Flask uses by default.
WSGI [3] is a specification that defines how a web server software and a web application written in Python communicate. This could be the Apache or Nginx web server with their WSGI
39%
29.09.2020
4c
SATA Version is: SATA 3.1, 6.0 Gb/s (current: 6.0 Gb/s)
Local Time is: Sun Aug 2 10:41:21 2020 EDT
SMART support is: Available - device has SMART capability.
SMART support is: Enabled
39%
30.05.2021
on most servers, is HTTP/1.1 – even though HTTP/3 has already been defined. In this article, I look at the history of the protocol and the practical differences between versions 1.1, 2, and 3 ... HTTP/2 introduced multiplexing, resulting in superior bandwidth utilization over HTTP/1.1, and HTTP/3 solves the problem of transmission delays from packet loss by replacing TCP with QUIC. ... HTTP/1.1 versus HTTP/2 and HTTP/3