Sure, just let me pick up a whole production plant and import a few thousand workers already trained on my processes. Should be able to get that done by this weekend.
I've had similar with other items in the sense of wait several days, no shipping notice so a week later message to cancel it, then several hours later get a ship notice and reply that 'oh it went out already and you would have to wait to send it back'.
I'm guessing to do with some kind of drop shop inventory nonsense, makes no sense otherwise.
Didn't start mine until mid 30s but after it finally got me out of the 'just another job' ranks and put me into decent career class work. Not a sure thing, but in my case it was a sizable change in my life path.
Was the prior drive set in some kind of raid set or just individuals, and what are the old drive capacity vs new?
I guess it depends a lot on what your doing with the server. If it's pure data store I would just boot off a USB and give yourself all the data space since it's quite likely all running in ram anyhow.
If you run apps out of it and need the M2 for swap and rapid cache storage the fastest would likely be make a 2 drive zpool, copy a single to it, and repeat as needed until you have it all copied over, then add the 3rd to the zpool
Well I see it I repos and app stores, not real sure of the development, last update on the Google store was Feb 2024. Still seems to work when I've played with it
Wikipedia though has a strong reputation for being well cited and due in large part to the huge user base glaring inaccuracies get corrected quickly. I saw a study at one point comparing them to a traditional encyclopedia and they had of course faster shifting errors, but on average where pretty on par for accuracy.
A federated system where I or any other knucklehead could put up an instance isn't going to have that 'checked by 1000 eyes' factor going so much, or if it did ever get to that point then they've likely become the defacto 'real' federated encyclopedia and the others inherently suspect.
All in all It's a neat idea, but sounds like it'd be rife with chaotic discord. As a general thing if something is on the standard Wikipedia I can be pretty sure it's reasonably accurate without having to research who posted it, and I can torrent a copy of the whole thing as I just recently found out.
Generally yeah, the same could be said for Lemmy and their communities. The challenge is when you have federated systems like this you have to largely take it as good faith that instance owners will keep reasonably updated software and good practices so you don't end up with a pile of spam edits.
With communal wiki type systems as a whole you end up with the question of credibility. Some people would cite only well researched and validated studies, and some people whole heatedly believe that a religious text was written by divine hand and this must be true. How do you reconcile those two without giving weight to things that are patently nonsense, aka you must teach the gospel of the flying spaghetti monster to be fair to all?
Rage comics referencing Facebook, what year is it?