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L' 🇮🇹 è il Paese europeo dove si muore meno di cancro

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Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • “la solidarieta’ non e’ reato! la resistenza non e’ terrorismo”. sabato 21 febbraio giornata di mobilitazione con i prigionieri politici palestinesi
    @anarchia
    Associazioni palestinesi in Italia e realta’ solidali hanno indetto per sabato 21 febbraio una giornata di mobilitazione a fianco dei

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  • La Stanza cinese ai tempi degli LLM

    https://wp.me/p6hcSh-9nb

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  • Testing the Pressure Limits for Glass in Water Cooling Blocks

    Many people who use water cooling in their computer systems like to go full-bore with ‘aquarium’ aesthetic, which includes adding a window to their cooling blocks so that they see the water flowing through the window from behind the case’s window. Traditionally PMMA acrylic is used for these windows, as it’s quite durable and easy to handle.

    Using glass offers some advantages over acrylic, but has its own disadvantages, most of all that it’s hard to process, but also that it’s known for shattering quite easily if pushed beyond its limits.

    This is why [der8auer] as a manufacturer of such water blocks has now spent a few years investigating the viability of using glass for this purpose. First and foremost is safety, with an early prototype glass water block suddenly shattering without clear cause.

    Although normally the water cooling loop is only expected to experience pressures of about 600 mbar, the new glass windows that are now entering mass-production had to be tested to their breaking point. This involves pumping water into a few test blocks until they fail, using the test rig that you can see above.

    First the big GPU water block was tested, with the acrylic version breaking at around 8-9 bar, while the glass plate shattered at around 5 bar. The failure mode was also interesting, with the glass plate shattering into fragments, while the two acrylic plates tested failed in a completely different location and manner.

    A smaller water block with glass window failed at about 10 bar, demonstrating mostly that smaller glass windows are a lot sturdier. Effectively glass windows in water cooling loops are viable, and they also do not suffer from e.g. discoloration, but you do give up a big chunk of your safety margin if your water cooling loop suffers a major pressurization event. Which of course should never happen, but we’re definitely looking forward to the upcoming field trials of these new water blocks.

    youtube.com/embed/_jIqtapkDRo?…

    hackaday.com/2026/02/22/testin…

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  • @evan These people complaining how they can’t keep any water at their bedsides because cat either haven’t discovered bottles or have super advanced cats with opposable thumbs.

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  • @evan I used to, but I also have my desktop computer next to my bed, because it was the only realistic way to lay things out. And after an accident which cost me $2000 in computer parts, I decided I could go downstairs if I was thirsty in the middle of the night.

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  • @evan
    I only keep a glass, and It's totally full, but mostly not water or any such substance.

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  • @evan Yes indeed. Middle of the night thirst quench is one of life’s little pleasures.

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