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Auteur: Didier Kryn
Date:  
À: dng
Anciens-sujets: Re: [DNG] SSD Lifetime?
Sujet: [DNG] What makes you deaf [was: SSD Lifetime?]
Le 05/12/2023 à 17:13, Steve Litt a écrit :
> Martin Steigerwald said on Tue, 05 Dec 2023 11:24:30 +0100
>
>
>> Steve talked about using a monster spinning disk in his mail not for
>> backup purposes, but for example for "/var" and "/home" I think, I bet
>> for his workstation. My comment was related to that. I would not
>> tolerate such a disk in my workstation nowadays anymore I bet.
> Yeah, it's loud. Of course, I have about 6 fans spinning at full speed
> constantly, which is the main component of my noise. I want everything
> running cool in my computer, and for me (YMMV), 35 db or whatever isn't
> the end of the world. Heck, I used to code 8 hours a night in a computer
> room with bunches of Vaxes, PDP-11s, and full size suction controlled
> reel to reel 9 track tape drives, and I lived to tell about it. Of
> course I'm halfway deaf now. Was it that computer room, the 90db
> factory I used to work in, or the rock concerts or the parties with the
> stereo cranked up to 100db? I don't know. And of course being halfway
> deaf makes it easier to put up with fan noise :-).
>

    You know the thing that you should never do because it makes you
blind -- but which everyone does. For people of English culture it make
you blind. In France it used to make you deaf. Of course nobody tells
that anymore to children and it was even never told to me; I learned it
from jokes. But it is always satisfactory to understand the cause of
things, therefore I suggest this explanation :-)

    More seriously, when I was working at CERN, where many electronics
racks are used with very noisy fans, a study was published which showed
that you become deaf to certain frequencies emitted by the fans but you
recover audition capability if you stop being exposed to these
frequencies for some time. I think mostly very high power noise or
music, and of course ageing, can cause permanent audidion loss.

--     Didier