I don't know if I'm understanding your question, but ZFS actively corrects data on disk when it finds a checksum error [0]. Those checksum errors can be found when accessing that data, or doing a 'scrub' action that scans the whole volume to check integrity.
ZFS supports self healing, you do not have scrub, it will be corrected during a bad read as long you have a copy. Metadata has 2 copies by default for additional safety for a single disk.
In 2025 I started programming 6502 assembly just for fun as intellectual exercise (i did TINY bit of x86 asm in the past) and MY GOD: this is so easy and so valuable to learn!
Programming 6502 seems simpler than learning lets say JS framework or to learn just about anything modern.
Its super fun, super easy and very rewarding.
I ended up designing my own ultra RISC, stack based and uniform 32-bit fixed-length data size (all instructions and data have exactly the same size) with mimo and other cool features. 6502 on steroids
I felt competent first time for long time as jobless programmer doing that :)
> Programming 6502 seems simpler than learning lets say JS framework or to learn just about anything modern.
Vast, complex, changing APIs make programming unfun. Retro machines were fun because the things to learn were concise; the rest was up to your thinking.
An LLM does not continuously index the Internet and is therefore stale the second it starts training. You need to use something like RAG. And the R in RAG needs an index.
Lol. Guy claims that it has a lot of applications, while just listing some defaults installed from Windows!
No third party application mentioned, not even one!
Article 2/5 (Sounds like paid post by Microsoft or Lenovo).
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