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made of acrylic, very often used.

 

kitchen is the topic for Macro Mondays May 4th.

 

On the iPad with a colourful image open and black paper behind it.

This is about 4 cm.

 

Happy Macro Monday.

 

Thank you for your views, faves and or comments, they are greatly appreciated !!!

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission !!!

 

© all rights reserved Lily aenee

Wizard of Oz ink I believe

"Security Team Azure 4 reporting in, nothing out of the ordinary. Must have been a loose cable. Wait a sec, what was that . . . "

 

*BA-BANG BA-BANG BA-BANG* *static*

 

- Agent Calysee Atheria Rose, last known transmission.

Canon EOS 6D - f/7.1 - 1/320sec - 90mm - ISO 100

Restaurant Covent Garden London,

Here at Opscode Austin, we've got a bit of a private cloud in the works. These are my test machines for deploying OpenStack and other applications with Chef.

我们在QQ上发送的信息说不定就是通过这里传输的喔

Rudolf

 

I had to build a server / client system.

At first I thought it up assembled easily with afp. This modus operandi the problem is too many.

I thought I was going to try to introduce a NAS. This is too much money.

The user directory of Mac mini that has been bought as a server was try to share. Problem came to login. El Capitan's OS that could be better. It is a masterpiece since Snow Leopard. And about one month struggle a result of ... put the data to an external HDD. To connect to the machine to use it. HDD will be mirroring are prepared two. This primitive way is best. It's a conclusion. MBP's powerful to synchronize the difference between the HDD.

Three to a HDD of 3TB in front of the eye. The only one to save the data without connecting. And it's only when the difference adding the link.It was connected to an external HDD to Airport time capsule.

This backup issues and data sharing problems was solved. Simple is best.

Day-to-day I enter Unix commands to open the console is over.

 

I thought the normal operation start ... monitor of Mac mini has become passed away. WTH

Yes, new monitor that has been bought. The bright and beautiful. Broken monitor discount of ¥ 1000 in the trade. I bought a I-O DATA took over the Mitsubishi of technology.

Why not buy a Thunderbolt display?

There is not a retina. 27 inches monitor is two in front of the eye. It falls in the feeling of pressure.

Mac mini is enough at 24 inches 1080p.

 

Now what in normal operation, I also return to normal operation and ... plans.

And the results only God knows.

Just checking the servers as i wish you all a fantastic day :)

We've been talking, and Honey Lemon & Space Cadet SL have decided to start a Discord server to make our brands more accessible to everyone!

 

Be one of the first to join: discord.gg/CNbEgmx2ZX

actually, we're phasing OS X Server off most of the nodes, since all the software will run under OS X Client, no need to pay the extra licensing fees

Our favourite server at one of our regular restaurants.

Pretty wine server at Maelstrom Winery.

 

Seaforth,Ontario

Canada

 

www.maelstromwinery.ca/site/home

i used this one for a new desktop picture

This Red-tailed Hawk looked as though he was "serving" the duck in lower right corner, instead of dining on it. Taken 1/14/10. Went back to the hard drive for this one.

South Bank London.

A tour of the mcli server "farm", more of an agglomeration.

 

Starting from the left, we have "Jade", a 1.33GhZ Apple Xserver that runs CogDogBlog (weblog plus a few more), the Feed2JS site as well as virtual hosting Maricopa eP, an electronic portolio system. The Xserve also does some QuickTime streaming, such as our examples of Digital Stories created by faculty in a summer workshop.

 

Below the table, the left tower is Azurite, a Mac OSX server (1 GHz) that mainly hosts project files and FileMaker databases used my our office staff. It runs as a web server just a copy of our Writing HTML tutorial as well as a smaller amount of QuickTime streaming.

 

The tower on the right is a 664 MhZ Pentium 2, also know as "Realgar" where I test a few new applications, run an evaluation license of Helix (Real Media server), and some things like a copy of my Kiwi Wiki.

 

To the right of this is a 20 minute APS battery backup. Just in case your power goes out... for less than 20 minutes. All the servers are set to reboot if their power goes out.

 

What is really cool is a new Belkin OmniViewKVM switch (left of the monitor), a 4 way switchbox so you can use one Keyboard, Video, and Mouse to switch between 4 computers-- the nice feature here is the ability to connect to either USB (Mac) or PS/2 (the old PC) connections.

 

Finally, on the shelf above are 4 FireWire hard drives, used for backups of the two Mac servers with Retrospect. Each server rotates backups between two external drives.

 

The PC server backs up over the ntetwork to another server upstairs, which then does its own backups on a dedicated tape drive.

My old server machine started locking up frequently, and I couldn't isolate the cause. (I think I narrowed it down to the motherboard or CPU itself.) Rather than spend a small fortune swapping out components, I decided a "new" PC was in order.

 

I found this refurbished Dell Optiplex 7050 online for about $200. It came with 32GB RAM and a new 500GB NVMe drive. There's room in the SFF case for a single 3.5" hard drive, so I installed one of my old 2TB drives. I'll probably buy a larger SATA drive on sale during Black Friday, as SMART reports that it's been running for 9+ years (that's actual total UP time - not merely its age)!

 

Anyway, I've installed Linux Mint 21.2. This morning I got file and print sharing configured for everyone on our home network again. It's also running Folding@Home, but on the lowest setting. These SFF cases are nice, but cooling is an issue. I'm definitely pushing it on the CPU temp, but staying well below critical.

 

Of course, I have all my figurines set up around it. I own my geekiness. :)

Billedet er også skudt fra hoften.

Super excited to see my first custom kit hit shelves. I worked with Sermon Audio to create a replica of their servers and after doing a large commission model we scaled down for a kit that you can purchase and assemble yourself. I did my best to make the building process an enjoyable one, there's some interesting LEGO math going on behind the scenes. Really fun experience to think not only how others would interact with the final product, but how they'd experience the build process. Makes me appreciate official LEGO sets all the more!

 

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Original image and processing by me

I made this picture for the Inria contest on "Computing: past, present, and future". The abacus is, to me, the birth of computing.

 

I borrowed a camera with a very fast lens, and went to the server room of our research center, where I played finding a spot for the abacus in the middle of the computing equipment. A large numerical aperture gave me a short depth of field, turning the lights in a nice bokeh.

 

I did fairly little post-processing, using darktable as always. I used a local contrast filter on the abacus itself, and pushed the colors in the top right of the photo toward green.

 

"Mirror’s Edge Catalyst"

-4000x5333 (SRWE Hotsampling)

-Hattiwatti's Cinematic Tools (free camera, timestop, FOV, HUD toggle)

-ReShade Framework

After all, a two-storey server room, complete with glass floor, functional lighting and a claustrophobic hallway seems to be exactly the kind of challenge I wanted for making a scene.

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