Hardware support: Quad-Core Tiger Lake-U 10nm CPU Outperforms The Core i5-9300H |
- Quad-Core Tiger Lake-U 10nm CPU Outperforms The Core i5-9300H
- Exclusive: Intel Rocket Lake-S features PCI-Express 4.0, Xe Graphics
- Help with Company LAN Network
- Does anyone here know much about the electronics fit (both controller and sensors) of a ventilator or ECMO machine?
Quad-Core Tiger Lake-U 10nm CPU Outperforms The Core i5-9300H Posted: 22 Mar 2020 12:36 PM PDT |
Exclusive: Intel Rocket Lake-S features PCI-Express 4.0, Xe Graphics Posted: 22 Mar 2020 04:44 AM PDT |
Posted: 23 Mar 2020 02:16 AM PDT Hello everyone, I hope this is the right subreddit (and I used the right flair) to ask regarding my challenges regarding our company LAN network. About myself: I am CEO of a company working in influencer marketing and artist management and offer YouTube videos and streams for companies. Therefore, we need quite some bandwidth. We are 12 employees so a dedicated system administrator doesn't make sense, yet. I have the highest tech affinity, so I cover all our tech topics as well as I can. We just moved offices and are supposed to get glass fiber in about 2 months. Until then, we tried to get the most bandwidth possible. Therefore we have two VDSL connections from Telekom and one cable connection from Vodafone. Therefore, I have three routers standing here right next to each other as well as one printer and a little file server. I would like to have all three router connected in a way, that, no matter through which router I get my internet connection, I can access the server and the printer. In my noob language, I assume that I could do the following: I connect deactivate in all three routers the function that provides the IP address to the different devices. Then I connect those three to each other and configure the static IPs manually, depending on which PC i want to which internet connection. In case this is correct: Could I also keep the function that provides the IP on one router activated, so everyone goes through that router automatically, and for all devices that are supposed to go through one of the other routers, I have to use a static IP. Would that work? Thank you so much in advance! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 22 Mar 2020 05:04 AM PDT Process, horsepower, what kind of chips power it, the standard sensors, that kind of thing. I'm wondering about the electronics side of emergency production of such devices. [link] [comments] |
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