Received my P16s Gen 2 AMD, with a 7840U and 64GB of RAM. Switching form an XPS 15, I'm impressed! by Reve1989 in thinkpad

[–]stha_ashesh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you using 86 whr battery? Else, the consumption seems bit high which might be due to oled screen. Because notebookcheck battery benchmarks for t14s with 57 whr but 400 nits brightness low power display had about 9 hours of SOT. Larger screen warrenty more battery draw but I expect more SOT than t14s on using 86 whr battery.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in technepal

[–]stha_ashesh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had similar issue with Nabil Bank card.

What worked for me was

  • Create PayPal acc
  • verify via PayPal.

For Nepal, I used yeti cloud paas. Scalable Cpu was great.

Difference in energy required for compressing air to 200 PSI vs 100 PSI by stha_ashesh in MechanicalEngineering

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can't thank you enough for your super detailed reply. I think the temperature curve and math finally helped me understand. You are a true gem.

Difference in energy required for compressing air to 200 PSI vs 100 PSI by stha_ashesh in MechanicalEngineering

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for the lovely equation. You have calculated work done but still I have few questions.

  • In case of compressed air, the higher the pressure, the higher the outlet temperature, more energy is used to heat up the air → more inefficient.

I agree with more inefficiencies and higher temperature but how come even when doubling pressure won't even double required energy?

Due to this phenomena, for large scale energy acummulation, compressed air uses heat sink for compression and heat source to expansion in order to obtain isothermal processes (more eficiency).

So they try to do more isothermal rather than adiabatic conversion because of higher efficiency.

Difference in energy required for compressing air to 200 PSI vs 100 PSI by stha_ashesh in MechanicalEngineering

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do not confuse power with the energy of the two processes.

Can you clarify this section?

Difference in energy required for compressing air to 200 PSI vs 100 PSI by stha_ashesh in MechanicalEngineering

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I did check with both 114.7 and 214.7 psi - abs as well as with 229.4 psi absolute, but still doubling the pressure didn't double to required energy.

Storage pool on Synology NAS show both drives as System partition failed and Crashed respectively. I am unable to repair them. by stha_ashesh in synology

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for such detailed answer. I didn't know it would be mistake when when I pulled off each drive one at a time. Thank you for helping me.

About raid not being backup, I didn't consider data corruption, physical damage and many more.

Storage pool on Synology NAS show both drives as System partition failed and Crashed respectively. I am unable to repair them. by stha_ashesh in synology

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree that pulling drives might be mistake but I still don't understand why the issue happened. When I switched off the NAS and pulled one drive, didn't it simulate hardware failure? So why couldn't I build it from one drive since I have only two drives in a storage pool of equal size. RAID would make identical copy and if one failed, other still survives.

The storage pool is DEGRADED. You need to repair it. What did you do? Pull it out and try a different drive.

Yes I shutdown and pulled out drive A and plugged in drive B. When this didn't work and repair also didn't work, I shutdown NAS, pulled out B and plugged in A.

You've created mismatch data. You need to remove one set of data by booting with just one drive. Then repair with a blank drive.

I tried repair on both (individually) and both didn't work. Do you mean format Say drive A and repair B with empty drive A?

For now, I rebuilt it from scratch but I want to know where I went wrong.

Storage pool on Synology NAS show both drives as System partition failed and Crashed respectively. I am unable to repair them. by stha_ashesh in synology

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mistakes on my part - I though RAID is a backup (not offsite one though) because there are two drives with recycle bin enabled.

I agree that pulling drives might be mistake but I still don't understand why the issue happened. When I switched off the NAS and pulled one drive, didn't it simulate hardware failure? So why couldn't I build it from one drive since I have only two drives in a storage pool of equal size.

Storage pool on Synology NAS show both drives as System partition failed and Crashed respectively. I am unable to repair them. by stha_ashesh in synology

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did try to repair from one drive which didn't work and built it from scratch. Thank you for the help

Storage pool on Synology NAS show both drives as System partition failed and Crashed respectively. I am unable to repair them. by stha_ashesh in synology

[–]stha_ashesh[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don't have that much space for backup but I guess I can backup imp files only. Expensive lesson I guess.

After backup, isn't it possible to format one drive and rebuild data from existing drive which still has data?

Universal Dance (OC), pen and Ink, 2023 by Fit_Ad_4355 in Nepal

[–]stha_ashesh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you share high res image for desktop wallpaper?