Is there an option to turn them off?
Is there an option to turn them off?
No idea. Continue to the next bit.
If that passes, it’s the power button (unlikely, it’s just a button) or the motherboard or some component. If the power button contacts are exposed, and assuming it’s a regular momentary contact switch, you should be able to bridge them to complete the power button circuit, eliminating the button itself.
ect
*etc., short for et cetera, Latin “and the rest”.
But native speakers do that all the time too. I don’t know how, because nobody ever says “ect” out loud.
Hmm. Like @ganeshaix said, maybe the cable, or the backplane? Does it work if you connect the drives directly to the card?
Having free time makes you a loser?
SAS to 4 times SATA
I’m no expert, but can you do that? Are they SAS or SATA drives? Do they show up if you connect the drives or backplane directly to the motherboard?
A singularity is the single point mass at the center of an ideal (Schwarzschild) black hole. But mathematically, that can only happen if the mass that forms the black hole isn’t rotating. In reality, all the mass in the universe is moving around, because mass is not distributed uniformly, so gravity is pulling stuff around in a big mess. So when a black hole forms, it’s definitely a rotating (Kerr) black hole.
A rotating mass has different gravity than a non-rotating mass. Not by much, but when you’ve got the enormous mass of a black hole, it becomes significant. This causes objects “falling into” a black hole to “miss” the point at the center, and form more of a cloud during spaghettification.
The article is fairly accessible if you sit down and read it.
Honestly, inside the event horizon, everything stops making sense compared to our day-to-day experiences. The immense gravitational forces distort space and time. It doesn’t really make sense to think about objects remaining intact as recognizable objects once they cross the event horizon.