How do pickleball balls fit into this? They’ve got holes in them, is this something I need to look out for?
Greg Clarke
Mastodon: @greg@clar.ke
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How do you have the SAS drive connected to your Mint 22 box (what exact adapter/controller)? Is it going through a real SAS HBA (LSI/Broadcom-style, IT/HBA mode), or through a RAID controller / USB-SAS bridge / “virtual” adapter?
Reason I’m asking: there are basically two connection paths:
- True HBA/passthrough: Linux gets direct SCSI access (you’ll see a /dev/sgX for the disk) and you can usually low-level reformat it back to 512-byte logical blocks (e.g., from 520/528).
- RAID/USB/translation layer: the controller hides or emulates the SCSI commands, so tools like sg_format often can’t issue the low-level format needed to switch the sector size. That might be why the disk is visible in the disks app but not in gparted.
Given the screen shots I believe it’s the later. Can someone smarter than me confirm?
USB enclosures for SAS drives are available
I’m confident this is recoverable. Can you throw the failing drive into a USB enclosure? It might be easier to reformat the drive in the OS you’re most familiar with.
And don’t feel bad about breaking things, that’s the best way to learn! I’ve been breaking things long before ChatGPT came along.
That’s ignoring the fact that billionaires are already lobbying governments to pay less in taxes. If nothing else, a billionaire lobbying to pay more in taxes would highlight the hypocrisy of the current system and expose the existing corruption.
Can you expand on this? I don’t understand your argument
The best way a billionaire could spend their money is to lobby politicians to tax the rich.
OP can use a Cloudflare tunnel which would take care of caching and prevent any accidental DDoS attacks.



It also looks like they’ll be the right age for WW3 deployment