Generally you can upgrade RAM of different capacities, but only the amount of RAM that matches the original will run in dual channel. I've done it in a couple of machines, and it worked fine. the extra RAM should take a small performance hit, but In my case the tradeoff was worth it. I've also upgraded RAM beyond the specified max. Hasn't always worked.
elucubra
Thanks! Did the trick!
People assume that Boeing is behind this. I'm more inclined to believe that it's a major shareholder
In the US the most trustworthy media sources right now are Jon Stewart and John Oliver
Banks, Insurance , etc. are ultraconservative as far as tech. They want ultra stable systems. I had an acquaintance that had a business reselling ATMs to banks. Banks had a hard time sourcing EOL ATMs or spares. I remeber a story about some specific 486s CPUs and SIMMs that sold for 1000s, due to not being sourceable new from any supplier, and being needed as replacements for certain ATMs
Banks and insurance companies are also scared shitless of something breaking during upgrades to systems that control billions in funds
I run Mint Cinnamon. It's been Rock solid for me. You can modify, add, remove whatever you want. With Flatpacks you are mostly up to date. If you want to install a newer kernel you can, and if you have Timeshift running and something breaks, you just roll back.
I see Mint as an Un-enshittified Ubuntu.
I find cinnamon very frienly and comfortable, which I need in a daily driver. To play I have things like NixOS. I could Arch, but I'm not vegan. :)
That said, I'm giving Fedora Kinoite (Atomic) a try in a VM
I'm almost a boomer. I started out in a Big Iron shop that mainly ran Cobol I haven't touched it in decades, and I was an Admin, so I barely touched the stuff. Now I could read the stuff, but not code a hello world.
A few years back a friend my age, who was a CS major, but had mainly been a mom for 2 decades returned to the job market, thinking that she faced an impossible task, that she had obsoleted herself. She was working within a week, maintaining Cobol at a bank, and making mint.
I just tried it in a VM, and it had me jump through some hoops for flatpaks to work. Not ideal for newbies
Actually Mint is un-enshittified Ubuntu
Will try. Thanks
I suspect that there is something like that, since the Linux VM can access the share
These things (and Seagate's) have the usb interface soldered on, so if the drivd dies, forget about the data, no way to connect to another usb adapter to try to recover. Granted, it's usually the drive that dies, but in these cases, you have a 100% rate of non recovery . Any other brand's are standard drives. My favorite are toshiba.