Also less likely to harbour bugs.
boblin
The CIS benchmarks for Linux are a good start. There are some off the shelf tools that let you run those, notably linux-bench. Another tool in a similar fashion is lynis. You can also use eBPF tools like callander to examine your workload behaviour and help tighten your seccomp policies.
Once you've established a baseline for your system, you'll next want to harden your environment. This means network scans, OWASP, etc. As far as off the shelf tools go, OpenVAS is quite popular even in Enterprise environments.
Finally there's the continuous security tasks. Continuous package updates, runtime security, log analysis, etc. There are some free tools that cover part of this like Security Onion, but if the price is right a SaaS tool can save you a lot of time.
Many much housen.
Why not both?
It relates to "real" (physical, tangible, immovable or inseparable) property pertaining to land. In other words land plus buildings and resources attached to it. It contrasts with personal property and intellectual property.
data centers
recharge while the computer is off
I don't know of many data centers that don't run their servers 24/7
There's also the fact that credit rating agencies in North America have hardly any supervision and are prone to make mistakes because they take correlated data by face value.
Assistant != AI.
Don't forget heat! In space you can't dump heat into the atmosphere, so PDLs would not be able to support as much of a continuous firing rate as PDCs.
Also PDCs can be used to lay down a flak screen, potentially intercepting additional missiles.
They aren't lap cats. They're trying to smother you, but are not very good at it.
Configure port forwarding for the VM.
Take a machine with Linux preinstalled. Will it run Linux without problems? Yeah, of course.
Take a machine with Windows preinstalled. Will it run Linux without problems? Check the list.