IMO, its not a brand issue. Its a seller/batch/brand issue. Hard drives are sensitive to vibration, and if you buy multiple drives from the same place, at the same time, and all the same brand and model, you might be setting yourself up for a bad experience if someone accidentally slammed those boxes around earlier in their life.
I highly recommend everyone buy their drives from different sellers, at different times, spread out over various models from different brands. This helps eliminate the bad batch issue.
From the looks of it, that should be your linux boot partition.
If you can, just remove every other drive temporarily while you focus on that specific drive. This will help avoid making changes to the windows bootloader.
From there, boot into an arch iso, mount your btrfs subvolumes (i.e. /mnt and /mnt/home and /mnt/var/logs and whatever other subvolumes you have), mount your boot partition into your btrfs mount point (i.e /mnt/boot), and then arch-chroot into your system (/mnt).
From there you'll be in your actual system. If you're using systemd-boot, run the bootctl install command. This will copy the systemd-boot UEFI boot manager to the ESP, create a UEFI boot entry for it and set it as the first in the UEFI boot order.
If you are using grub, follow the grub guidelines for installing their bootloader (im not familiar with grub commands).
Once that is done, go ahead and run mkinitcpio -P to make sure your kernel images are bootable options for your bootloader.
After that, exit and unmount the boot and BTRFS subvolumes and reboot.
Yes, each eSIM has its own unique IMEI. Some phones have multiple eSIMs, so they could technically have multiple carriers/phone numbers assigned to it.
Radio is referring to the proprietary piece of hardware that is in every cell phone that handles the physical portion of transmitting radio waves for wireless connectivity. This piece of hardware generally handles LTE/5G, wifi, and bluetooth.
Your IMEI is the identifier that is burned into that hardware, which uniquely lets the carriers determine if your device can authenticate on their networks.
You can turn off the radio by disabling your cellular network or turning on airplane mode on your phone. You will temporarily lose access to your cellular network until you turn it back on.
Newer devices don't require SIM cards to connect. They have eSIM cards that can be used. You still need one or the other to connect to a cellular network.
My state provides judicial performance reports for each and every judge per judicial body. They are based on surveys responses from attorneys, peer judges/justices, jurors, witnesses, etc. They score legal ability, integrity, communication skills, judicial temperament, administrative performance, settlement performance, etc. The scores are Superior, Very Good, Satisfactory, Poor, or Unacceptable. It gets pretty in-depth. They also provide judge biographies and history.
We also look at who their supporters are, and check for headlines theyve made, as well as social media posts.
We usually have a big voting party with some cordial friends and go through the performance reports together on our mail in ballots.
Forgive me. Just trying to understand. How does the kernel flag NEO_DISABLE_MITIGATIONS have any affect on the CPU? Seems to be targeted towards OpenCL and Level Zero, which are APIs to access GPU hardware directly.
Depends on how you use your system if you have multiple users. CPU mitigations wont protect GPU workloads, and vice versa. If your CPU was mitigating GPU workloads, that would probably be a massive performance loss.
They won't make it compatible if they don't have Firefox users.