|
Dec
21 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Jul
13 |
|
comment |
Modern distribution on old hardware I used the default ext4. I doubt you will see big differences between filesystems unless you are doing some seriously heavy, I/O bound work (audio, video, DB, etc). But I never worried much about that... some more informed people may be able to help you. Perhaps searching for filesystems in UNIX StackExchange you'll find some info. |
|
Jul
5 |
|
answered | Modern distribution on old hardware |
|
May
20 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
May
10 |
|
awarded | Supporter |
|
May
8 |
|
awarded | Enthusiast |
|
May
5 |
|
awarded | Analytical |
|
May
5 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
May
5 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Apr
20 |
|
answered | Volume on Linux much lower than on Windows |
|
Apr
9 |
|
answered | Memory Stick Partially Corrupt |
|
Feb
13 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Nov
29 |
|
awarded | Teacher |
|
Aug
12 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
May
31 |
|
answered | Indenting multiple files |
|
Mar
31 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Mar
24 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Jan
28 |
|
awarded | Autobiographer |
|
Jan
25 |
|
comment |
How to redirect stderr,out to different files and also display in terminal? This is a duplicate of this question |
|
Jan
25 |
|
comment |
How to redirect stderr,out to different files and also display in terminal? @dogbane Yes, you're right. Sorry about that. |