BlueAure
Screen is probably broken. You might be able to replace it by buying a replacement screen and following a guide by ifixit. Usually pretty straightforward.
I like Axios because it’s short form but has extended versions of I find it interesting enough to learn more.
Usually, not adhering to timing recommendations isn’t going to damage a circuit. However, it introduces potentially undefined or unpredictable behavior. For example, if you are driving a pump with specific timing requirements to control precisely the amount of fluid passed and you skew the timing a bit. Most of the time it would probably be fine, but there would be the potential that it might pump too much or too little. For a low precision application like a sump that’s ok, but for a high precision application like an medication pump it has the potential to kill someone.
At the end of the day, it depends on your tolerance for risk. Manufacturers generally certify their products for the timing on their datasheets. If you operate out of those specs, you are taking the responsibility of what happens.
Don’t want to scare anyone off, but it all depends on what you’re doing with it. In personal projects, yeah I’ll do all kinds of squirrely out of spec shit, but I’d never do that at work cause of potential liability. It’s up to you to determine if losing a couple steps on your watering pump will kill anybody or not! :D
I use mergerfs to pool a bunch of varying sized drives and then run snapraid on the whole pool to protect it. Then, I’ve got Kopia backups running and backup up to a remote repository. This solution has been flexible and I’ve already been able to recover from 2 drive failures very quickly and easily.
You should test it out and report back with the results.
The Yogscast Jingle Jam! They do an annual month long Livestream where they play games and raise money for a variety of charities. Donations of 35 pounds or more also get a whole bevy of game keys as part of the collection that can be redeemed on steam. You can see the list of games or donate at jinglejam.tiltify.com