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@catsalad @tperfitt as a cat would say “if I fits, I sits”
@catsalad this explains the firewall
@catsalad looks to be about 8U, which is what you say after dinner
@catsalad Huh, cheap rack, I mean finding a broken stove shouldn't be hard, people'll prolly pay you to take it away
@catsalad "My rack is heatin' up."
"Rack of ribs?"
"What?"
@catsalad if it's smaller than that you can just...rack mount it
@catsalad I prefer the ikea-solution: #LackRack
@catsalad This might be interesting for a broken one🤔
@catsalad Some people took hot mixing too far in the loudness wars.
@catsalad The frames of a bee hive are 19" as well. Imagine the possibilities!
@catsalad of in the cold audio of out the hot audio (if this is some kind audio device)

@catsalad

Easiest way to code a fire effect.

@catsalad sometimes you’d get micro breaks in the solder on circuit boards. The boards would stop working. HP printer Ethernet boards seemed really susceptible to this. Heating it in an oven would melt the solder and fill the break, making the board work again. There is a reason ovens are 19 inches.
@catsalad If your heating element goes out, a CISCO switch will probably get the job done.
@catsalad Why do I buy racks? 🤔
@catsalad pretty good at regulating temperature too!
@catsalad Ideal for people whose oven broke AND who are looking for a serverrack :) #recycle
@catsalad Unfortunately a standard oven width does not really exist which (at least for me) is killing the joke. Baking trays are often not even compatible among different generations of the same oven brand.

@catsalad Now people can repurpose old standard ovens as server racks.

Reduce, reuse, recycle!

@catsalad when the storage was required to be expanded...
@catsalad The phrase "bake textures" makes a lot more sense now.
@catsalad Be better if a refrigerator was compatible.
@catsalad today I saw someone throw away a good wooden IKEA 19" server rack. It didn't even look too old. What are those people even thinking.

@catsalad Something I always wanted to do would go nicely with this: put an adjustable valve in the gas line, bridged by a solenoid valve connected to a setpoint controller. The manual valve supplies just enough gas to keep the flame lit, and the solenoid valve turns on and off to keep the oven at the setpoint temperature.

Add rack rails and you have the perfect temperature-testing setup.

@catsalad I learned this from Jensen
@catsalad this image is causing me considerable distress