

My 13 year old pc still going strong. Whats the longest you've run a system?
Supermicro x9dai
2x Xeon E5 2690v2 - 20 cores 40 threads
256gb DDR3 1600 RAM
Went from Titan Black > 1660 Super > 4070
Upgraded to PCIe Optane p4800x for boot drive
Had to manually modify the BIOS code to add booting from NVME / PCIe
Started on Windows 7 Pro, then Windows 10 Pro and now Windows LTSC IoT 2021
Changed the PSU after 12 years. Everything else is original.
It plays most games well in 4k, despite its age. I often run games from a ramdisk for extra snappiness. Still works great for 4K video editting, but 8K is too much.
13 years seems like such a long time, but i haven't really felt the need to upgrade to a new pc yet. I'm hoping it will last another 7 years.
After months of experimentation, i stumbled upon this cheap 25$ security camera lens that is both sharp and lightweight. All the wide angle C-Mount lenses i've tried so far are either too heavy or not fast enough.
This lens setup should also work on the upcoming Gopro ILC. It covers the entire 1 inch sensor.
Finally action cameras that are decent in low light, lol
ISO 6400
Shutter 1/50th
No stabilization as the rx0ii has none
Lens weight is around 20 grams + adapter
Without wanting rattle a hornets nest, what's everyone's opinion on COI? I see many people here downplay it's importance, even though it's increasingly becoming clear how badly high COI affects the health of dogs (and breeds). I myself am involved in a dog breed which has a very narrow genepool, and the effects are devastating. To the point that the breed is at risk of dying out. Every closed studbook breed will face this problem sooner or later, as genetic information is lost every time a litter is bred within a closed studbook.
https://www.instituteofcaninebiology.org/blog/what-level-of-inbreeding-is-safe
A low COI doesn't automatically mean a healthy dog. It says nothing about inhereted genes (and diseases). But it does decrease the risk of a dog developing cancer, dying early, developing auto immune diseases. And it decreases the risk of spreading untestable recessive diseases throughout the genepool.