That assumes the people "broaching the topic of negotiations" are the same that promised support for however long it takes. Since the negotiation-supporters have chosen to remain anonymous, this is not an assertion we can make. But we know some likely names among US Republicans, parroting Russian propaganda.
Hopfgeist
It is up to Ukraine, but I think a few points remain extremely important:
- Any gain that Russia can retain from its aggression vindicates their invasion. And they will do it again. To the Russian government, personnel losses are irrelvant.
- Any peace that does not include Ukraine in a strong alliance (read: full NATO membership) will allow Russia to rebuild military strength and attack again to finish what they started
- Any deal that Russia signs is not worth the paper, as we have seen with the wanton violation of the Budapest Memorandum, in which Russia agrees to respect the borders of Ukraine as defined in the Helsinki Accords, and not to use force or threat of force against any signatory state (which included Ukraine).
- From which follows: only a strong Ukraine, backed by credible assurances of defense by all of NATO will keep Russia from attacking again. Not a written deal alone.
If you want a proper server, it seems that Asrock Rack is the only manufacturer of AM4-socket-based server mainboards. Unlike desktop/gamer boards, these are designed for parallel airflow, typically from front to back in a 19" rack. These also come with IPMI remote maintenance, so can be operated headless in a remote location.
I have considered one of these for a while, such as the X570D4U, which also supports up to 128 GB of ECC RAM. Depending on what you want, this may be overkill, though.
(This was my favourite, because it has two M.2 slots, but there are others with only a single slot, since you said you only need one.)
Unlike gamer or other boards, these have no fancy black vanity covers and often won't allow overclocking, but are typically very well designed and rock solid for unattended 24/7 operation.
I like how the members are all captioned as "A Princely Warrior".
Thanks. The point in my eyes is, if you massacre, (or slaughter) people that implies that they were innocent, which would make the act evil. And I'd hate for the legitimate attacks on the aggressor to be seen as evil. Because they are not. Just my opinion.
I would say they’re operating next to no aircraft in range of ATACMS.
They did at the time of the first ATACMS strikes, which was probably one reason why the delivery was kept secret until after the first ones had been used.
Thanks. I thought I heard Nasdarovye, which I knew in the context of "Cheers!" when drinking, I guess that's the "good health!" part.
Is there a transcript/translation available?
Parked aircraft are the most high-value tagets. It's perfect for (rather: against) those. But I'm not sure if any airfields in active use remain in range, I think the Russians have evacuated Berdyansk (maybe Luhansk, too) air base. I think the AFU currently only have ATACMS with cluster munitions, so it's no good against hardened infrastructure, only soft targets: concentrations of unarmoured vehicles and personnel.
That's a very narrow-minded view. I thought the same thing when the iPad was new. But I changed my mind.
Sitting on the sofa and watching movies or reading news is a good application, a laptop is too clunky for that, and a phone screen is too small.
Also use as an air-navigation device (not only) light aircraft, and replacement for paper charts in airline operations. There are many legitimate uses where tablets are exactly what you want. If it's not for you, fine.
Please don't call it massacre. That word is only used for the indiscriminate mass-killing of uninvolved civilians. These are combatants attacking a free country, they had it coming. So while bloody, it somehow puts it on a level with the atrocities committed by Hamas four weeks ago, and it definitely is not the same. Put another way, a massacre is never justified; attacking anyone who invaded your country, is.
"Speed limit enforced by aircraft."