• @zacher_glachl
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    3111 months ago

    Could also be mineral oil wicking up the cable, there are the absolute madmen who opt for oil immersion cooling their rig

    • @Landless2029
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      1711 months ago

      Seems like the water is coming from the left. So the wall not the PC.

      • @ArbiterXero
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        1711 months ago

        This looks like the “switch” or “router” end of the cable, so it could be coming from the PC

        • @Landless2029
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          1011 months ago

          Oh man you’re right. Two ethernet cables on the right. So yes it’s coming from the left.

          Could be oil from a PC or water from the wall.

            • @Landless2029
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              111 months ago

              Happy holidays to you too.

              Now back to my spiked eggnog

              • Tier 1 Build-A-Bear 🧸
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                English
                111 months ago

                Yes and happy holidays! My egg nog is not spiked unfortunately but I’ll cheers ya anyway, so cheers! :)

      • @9point6
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        edit-2
        11 months ago

        Might not be a PC but a security camera or some other outdoors mounted device

    • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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      511 months ago

      From what I know, the mineral oil builds are usually more for novelty than utility. Mineral oil isn’t a particularly good heat conductor, and it’s several times harder to push around than air is, so it’s not great for efficient thermals. It’s usually just done as a sort of “lol look at what I could do” build by people who have more money than sense.

      • @zacher_glachl
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        311 months ago

        Agreed, the only argument for oil immersion cooling is, AFAIK, better energy efficiency which is of course not a real consideration for high end consumer grade hardware. A previous iteration of our national compute cluster was oil immersion cooled but the tradeoffs in maintainability etc. were not even close to sensible so the next iteration went back to regular server racks. And the iteration after that needed the floor space and finally dialed in the end of oily door handles and eerily quiet but oppressively hot server rooms.