I’m writing this whilst I’m burning
It’s because you have swap enabled and the server would rather just die in a fire.
Happy cake day
Try to touch it
I have the opposite problem.
Maybe your server could help cool off theirs.
Take both of them and slap a sterling engine between them. Unless both servers combined are eating thousands of watts an hour you could end up net energy positive… Or you know perpetual energy.
0.05 K
And that last 0.5 was probably a rounding error It’s not showing double digit precision. :)
Reapply thermal paste every 24h. It’ll be fine.
Of course. That’s why it’s called KDE
Plasma
and notKDE Liquid
orKDE Gaseous
Still waiting for the
KDE Neutron Degenerate Matter
release.If Lemmy had awards, you would deserve one
i reposted this comment to !bestoflemmy@lemmy.world. You’re welcome.
To be fair, I still have this Lemmy award idea, with a twist. The pay goes to awardee’s preferred open-source project as donation.
Half of it split between the instances of the awarder and awardee, the other half as you said.
That would be even better!
Can’t touch this
So I was curious and looked it up because I would have assumed that stars/suns are much hotter than that.
Turns out the coldest star is 97°C at its surface. So I guess CPUs regularly reach (coldest) star temperature?
I guess technically. This makes me wonder what actually qualify as stars. Do neutron stars? Do black holes?
UPDATE: By the definitions on wikipedia, miriam-webster dictionary and britanica, a brown dwarf this cold may not actually qualify to be a star. I will search further for astronomical definition.
Brown dwarfs are classified as substellar objects because they can’t fuse hydrogen into helium and don’t undergo the same lifecycle as stars. White dwarfs aren’t stars either, they are stellar remnants that don’t have enough mass to keep fusing heavier elements, usually stopping at carbon and oxygen.
I’ve got a Dell R730, this is standard operating temperatures.
My Dell optiplex reports 126C, is this really normal dell behavior?
I’m more triggered by the missing degree symbol ° before C
It’s actually travelling at 6280 x the speed of light 😬
That would be lower case. It’s actually charged with 6280 Coulombs.
deleted by creator
Okay hear me out, we got nuclear fusion, now place some water in a massive tub on top of the pc.
Create steam
Spin turbines
Generate electricity
Send to another server
Infinate powerSend to another server
Why?
Just feed it back in itself.
Congratulations to you and the motherboard.
yes, but have you successfully achieved fusion in the CPU? if so, this will revolutionize selfhosting.
Trying to mine some Ethereum and accidentally ending up with with a shit-ton of hydrogen burning into helium
Great, now my electron wallet doesn’t want to work anymore. Said something about “busy influencing the fusion rate” and “please wait while I maintain the overall electrical neutrality within the plasma” or somesuch
…and converted to UltraSPARC?
OP at their keyboard right now:
At least swap usage is low.