basically hacker news went down yesterday and in this screenshot someone chimes in talking about it saying that they had a batch of SSDs manufactured by SanDisk all get bricked after exactly 40,000 hours (4.5 years) uptime because it overflowed an internal counter and corrupted the SSD's internal state.
someone from hackernews replies and says that the SSDs HN was hosted on were in fact SanDisk Optimus Lightning IIs and almost exactly 4.5 years old.
never trust a firmware
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Imagine being that sysadmin and everything goes down simultaneously for completely unknown reasons
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Sysadmin actually has to do something?
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ikr? I've always said that operations is 29-30 days of doing nothing but browsing the internets and trying to look busy, but then there is that 1 day that everything falls apart and you want to die because 40 people are breathing down your back to fix shit NOW.
Krayon sexually assaulted his sister.
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Snapshots:
archive.org
archive.ph (click to archive)
ghostarchive.org (click to archive)
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It's okay Snappy, there are backups.
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Direct link: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32028511
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Why would you use an ssd for that? Just use hard drives.
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I never buy cheap ssds and I am kind of scared of them tbh. Hdds fail very predictably, ssds are like playing russian roulette.
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