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author | Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org> | 2024-02-19 09:30:44 +0000 |
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committer | Marc Fonvieille <blackend@FreeBSD.org> | 2024-02-19 09:30:44 +0000 |
commit | d2a0941ab671367aa305e529228def21a62e4ddd (patch) | |
tree | bc6dfd9fc5aad80f8ffae07bca45ece45c8ba1b9 | |
parent | 5068bcbd299fd01fb8ffc862063b1867f87c4b6b (diff) | |
download | doc-d2a0941ab6.tar.gz doc-d2a0941ab6.zip |
books/faq: add a missing whitespace
-rw-r--r-- | documentation/content/en/books/faq/_index.adoc | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/documentation/content/en/books/faq/_index.adoc b/documentation/content/en/books/faq/_index.adoc index 7005ff48ed..c973d8a3ac 100644 --- a/documentation/content/en/books/faq/_index.adoc +++ b/documentation/content/en/books/faq/_index.adoc @@ -547,7 +547,7 @@ Neither group mentioned any significant variances in temperature. Seriously, FreeBSD uses ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface), therefore FreeBSD can put the CPU into low power mode. [[dev-null]] -=== Where does data written to/dev/null go? +=== Where does data written to /dev/null go? It goes into a special data sink in the CPU where it is converted to heat which is vented through the heatsink / fan assembly. This is why CPU cooling is increasingly important; as people get used to faster processors, they become careless with their data and more and more of it ends up in [.filename]#/dev/null#, overheating their CPUs. |