TOP 10 List of Week 09

  1. WD My Cloud OS 3 Review
    WD has revamped its web and mobile interface for all My Cloud devices with My Cloud OS 3. They seem to have modeled this new interface after some of the other successful interfaces, pursuing a simplistic and functional design with some new features.
  2. Server Firmware for stand-alone IBM i systems
    These recommendations are based upon your system already having installed the most current Cumulative PTF Package, HIPER PTF Group, and Database PTF Group
  3. The Boot Loader Specification
    TL;DR: Currently there’s no common boot scheme across architectures and platforms for open-source operating systems.
  4. systemd: Writing and Enabling a Service
    We have a whole category of BeagleBone tutorials. I found the specific image I installed on the elinux BeagleBoneBlack Debian page.
  5. Windows 10 Storage Management and Cleanup
    Windows 10 is the latest and greatest (and supposedly last) version of the Microsoft Windows desktop operating systems and it comes with many new features that previous versions of windows didn’t have. One of those features is the Windows Settings interface where you can do all sorts of configurations to your computer all from one place.
  6. Considering a hardware RAID? Here’s what you need to know
    It’s quiz time: what’s the single most important thing in your Mac computing environment? Is it the actual Mac model you use? Is it the size of the display attached to the Mac? The speed of the CPU? The amount of memory? The size of the hard drive? The speed of and memory on the graphics card? The network connectivity?
  7. Convert from Legacy BIOS to UEFI using one task sequence
    You have a current environment where you have deployed Windows 7 x64 OS, or similar, and you have your BIOS configured in Legacy mode.
  8. How to solve UEFI boot and startup problems
    Today, it supplements a new LangaList column scheduled for the March 25, 2019, AskWoody Plus Newsletter. Click on over for a look!
  9. How to Use GRUB Rescue on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
    GRUB is a bootloader software. It is widely used as the default bootloader for Linux. Although GRUB is used widely in Linux, GRUB can also boot Windows operating systems as well. It is very powerful and extensible.
  10. Converting traditional sysV init scripts to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 systemd unit files
    The first time you explore a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 system, you will quickly discover that the traditional init scripts are gone. When you view the /etc/init.d/README file, it is going to say that you are using a systemd based operating system and your init scripts are now replaced by systemd unit files.