It's a Coop Cage.
zurohki
Good thing real life companies would never act like that.
You're not supposed to use fc00::/8, so it's just the fd00::/8 half that's the new ULA.
That's what temporary privacy addresses are for. Clients can just keep generating new addresses in your /64, which is it's own subnet.
Yeah there is: not breaking all your internal traffic when the wan link goes down and you lose your prefix.
DeArrow is an open source browser extension for crowdsourcing better titles and thumbnails on YouTube. The goal is to make titles accurate and reduce sensationalism. No more arrows, ridiculous faces, and no more clickbait.
I'd argue it was more tedious than challenging, running rows and rows of parallel underground pipes.
Hello from a different instance.
It's also possible to have voltage issues on a device with multi-cell batteries.
My laptop charges on a type-C charger, but only if it can get 15+ volts. If it's a 12V charger, that isn't enough to push a charge into its battery. It will run on 12V but won't charge at all, even if it's off.
High temperatures at the CPU cores doesn't necessarily mean a cooling problem, unless it's actually getting to 90+ under load and throttling.
Take the side off your case and point a desk fan in there, if that doesn't help then more case fans won't.
Different graphical settings also move the bottleneck around. With a powerful GPU you can use higher quality modes and higher texture resolution because they don't really affect the CPU.
With your current system I'd absolutely do the GPU upgrade, and then later if you decide your CPU isn't powerful enough you can just get a new system with no GPU and move it over. No need to do everything at once, and that Ryzen 3600 still has some life left in it. The GPU really doesn't. 4GB VRAM means a lot of games will overflow into system RAM which has a big performance impact.
Additionally, it looks like that board supports the Ryzen 5800X3D with a BIOS update so you might consider that instead of replacing everything. If you're running out of system RAM and have RAM slots free, adding RAM is also an option.
If stuff is designed for big servers that run Linux, it's easier to get it to run on a desktop PC if the PC runs Linux too because then it's the same thing except much less powerful.