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(#o52fqoq) @prx J'espère que vous allez bien. Et c'est fous comme histoire, j'ai vu exactement la même sur BFM ce matain où le conducteur âgé (70 ans et quelques si je me rappelle bien) impliqué dans l'accident a fini par percuter quelqu'un d'autre quelques minutes après le premier accident.

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(#hqjnxla) @prx I was curious about this too, and here's what I found for Linux. I'd suppose there are equivalents in OpenBSD? 1. run `sudo tune2fs -l BLOCK_DEVICE | grep 'Filesystem created:'` on a BLOCK_DEVICE whose filesystem was created at 1st machine use 2. run `smartctl -a BLOCK_DEVICE | grep Power_On_Hours` to check the total power-on hours of some BLOCK_DEVICE that's been up since the machine's 1st use Obviously these both depend on having a block device (disk drive usu) whose life span is close to the machine's total uptime. There are utilities like `tuptime` in Linux, which I think are also compileable on OpenBSD, that you can install when you first start up a machine to keep this cumulative uptime but that doesn't help after the fact unless you solve time travel!

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