• GoodEye8@lemm.ee
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    22 hours ago

    My one question would be “How?”

    What the hell are you doing that your hard drives are overheating? How do you even know it’s overheating as I’m like 90% certain hard drives (except NVMe if we’re being liberal with the meaning of hard drive) don’t even have temperature sensors?

    The only conclusion I can come to is that everything he’s saying is just bullshit.

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      22 hours ago

      They have temp sensors. But have never heard of a overheating drive.

        • Mniot@programming.dev
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          20 hours ago

          Can we think of any device someone might have that would struggle with 60k? Certainly an ESP32 chip could handle it fine, so most IoT devices would work…

          • T156@lemmy.world
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            13 hours ago

            Unless the database was designed by someone who only knows of data as that robot from Star Trek, most would be absolutely fine with 60k rows. I wouldn’t be surprised if the machine they’re using caches that much in RAM alone.

          • zenpocalypse@lemm.ee
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            20 hours ago

            Right? There’s no part of that xeet that makes any real sense coming from a “data engineer.”

            Terrifying, really.

      • xthexder@l.sw0.com
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        21 hours ago

        Imo if they can’t max out their harddrive for at least 24 hours without it breaking, their computer was already broken. They just didn’t know it yet.

        Any reasonable SSD would just throttle if it was getting too hot, and I’ve never heard of a HDD overheating on its own, only if there’s some external heat sources, like running it in a 60°C room

        • T156@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          Hard Drives might do it if the enclosure is poorly designed (no ventilation), but I can’t imagine a situation where it would overheat like that that quickly, even in a sealed box. 30k is nothing in database terms, and if their query was that heavy, it would bottleneck on the CPU, and barely heat the drive at all.