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Do you have multiple NIC? I sporadically run into issues where traffic will try to route itself via a secondary network which has limited external access and it is resolved in a similar manner, by bringing down all networks, then re-starting them in a specific order.

Realistically I should probably define some static routes, but it works automatically 99% of the time so I never bother.

If this sounds like a possible cause, check your routes while in failed, and functional states, and set static routes as needed to resolve.

My money is on Putin knowing that his war is not winnable, but not being able to save face internally by admitting as such. If he can poke the bear enough with incursions into NATO countries like the last few days though, he might be able to draw NATO into direct conflict, at which point a withdrawal/surrender can be sold as “We were attacked by the big bad NATO and had to consolidate our local defenses” rather than a defeat by what should have been an inferior force.
Eh, it’s one of those perpetual rivalry things where the answer will probably never be known, and doesn’t really matter except when it comes to petty squabbles between nations.

Le pavlova etait un plat de nouvelle zealand. Si Bluey connais la, c’est parce que la recette etait vole.

Add accents to your pleasing…

No I don’t.

The best way to learn it, is to set yourself a goal/problem, define as best as possible how many unique issues that problem can be broken into, then start solving them one-by-one, periodically stopping to evaluate how they fit together.

Learning the best languages and structures to use will come as result of this.

^^ that person first though.
That may not be their intended purpose, but it is something we take note of when responding to an MVA. “Who else was in the vehicle” is a pretty standard question to ascertain if someone has been ejected, or is currently entrapped in the inaccessible wreckage, but if we notice a ‘baby on board’, we always make sure to also ask something along the lines of “where is your baby”, just to be safe.

The thing that is always painfully missing from any benchmark, is an endurance test.

I want to know how many TB I can write consecutively before the disk starts to degrade in performance and stop being useful. So far the only way I have been able to achieve this is to purchase a couple of every disk and stress them until failure, logging that interval, and selecting the winners for usage.

I do not care about how fast it can write over the course of five minutes, I want to know how fast it can write over the course of five hours continuous usage.

This is a very broad question, the answer to which will almost definitely be “yes, but”, so knowing what you are trying to achieve would be helpful.