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Suggestion: Look up the mobo and download the tested memory modules for it. In there you’ll find part numbers compatible with the mobo that you can shop for online.
IT Nerd of 30yrs and avid hobbiest of genealogy, geology and science in general.
Suggestion: Look up the mobo and download the tested memory modules for it. In there you’ll find part numbers compatible with the mobo that you can shop for online.
Most RAM have a lifetime warranty, so please take a picture of the errors and use that to rma (return) to the memory maker for a free replacement.
In the meantime, consider buying new ram (unless you can wait 6 weeks for an rma return lol).
Absolutely! Even memtest has a portable one.
https://www.memtest86.com/tech_creating-window.html
There’s some to test the hardware and even SSD, but I’d need to know the ssd brand/vendor.
edit: Adding ultimate boot cd as another useful tool that can run on usb
Sounds like memory corruption. Before you do like the other poster said and run memtest, I’d suggest reseating the ram, possibly in different banks if you can, reseat the video card and then try again.
If you still get failures:
Always backup your important files!
have you tried appending the name of the machine to the account? Either using ./username or machinename/username?
On windows you can use powershell to map it as well:
net use <driveletter> \mac\share /Username:machinename\user /persistent:yes
Alternative: Download sysinternals tools from Microsoft, procmon is way better anyways and portable.
eXFAT maybe and of course NFS (requires linux subsystem for windows though).
As NateNate60 mentioned: USB Flash. I second this as a cost effective alternative to anything else. Corsair Survivor, Sandisk Exteme Pro and Kingston DataTraveler Flash drives to 256GB are cheaper than anything else and just as reliable.
Should you want to go the SSD route, the Corsair MX500 drives purchased with any external esata or usb chassis is the most reliable option for the price.
Yeah, we dumped Cisco for Aruba two years ago. Completely replaced the entire company core network infra. No major complaints.
On the Enterprise side of things, I was a huge VCE fan pre-Dell days. Only thing close to that now is Pure Flashstack, which isn’t bad, just pricey. I’m just not a Dell fan, Michael Dell is a fuck-whit.
Comparing my experience with Cisco B and C Class, HPE DL and Dell PE server experience over the past 20 years:
Cisco: Expensive, Good support/service during lifetime of product, excellent management tools w/o buying additional lics, reliable, but eosl/eol is short and poorly supportable after.
DELL: Just retired some 30 of their servers and storage. No regrets. Expensive, horrible support, licensing is a nightmare, but e360 and online tools were better than others. EOL/EOSL support is okay for a max of 2 yrs afterwards.
HPE: Just deployed 20 DL380G10+, Cheaper than other 2, licensing is a pita, support is meh, but InfoSight and support costs are cheap and there’s good support past eol/eosl.
I’ve done the whole white box thing like SuperMicro a number of times and while it is cheaper upfront, it’s a headache over time.
Then there’s California where NEM 3.0 makes it less than worth while to install or upgrade your existing solar installation.
It’s like people hate ads so much they’re willing to change browsers… gasp
Google had a revelation.
Southpark Scott all growed up. I see his diet bedes issue has gotten worse.
Not in California though. You can own it, but you can’t buy nor shoot 5.56 or .223 on BLM or CA owned land. They’re also in the courts (appeals) to ban Assault rifles in the state.
Plextor CDRWs with Verbatim 50yr gold disks ftw.
Jira/Confluence (Atlassian) out, it was slow anyway. Gitlab onprem solution to replace it. If Gitlab ends up costing too much down the line, OSS gits will work just the same. Atlassian support is horrible anyway.
Storage vendors are rolling their hands in delight while systems administrators, particularly backup admins are cringing at the thought.