alternatively the neighbor in ASUS' product stack: the AX92U - also available in a pack of 2 (with a separate product name and page), for just a little more than the AX88U, so you can cover the area more efficiently with their easy to use meshing feature.
SniperFred
Exchange 2016 CU23 SU9v2 installed without errors, all services came back online like they are supposed to do.
MS rereleased the update, supposedly it is fixed now. We will look out for other reviews before installing.
https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/exchange-team-blog/re-release-of-august-2023-exchange-server-security-update/ba-p/3900025
on my private computer with 5800x3d 32gb and nvme opening a new explorer window is a tad slower. on my work device with i5-8350u and 16gb logging in and loading the core explorer task takes ages, but then during normal use i dont feel any further slowdowns
The Exchange Server SU breaks non-English Servers. MS acknowledged the issue and provides an official workaround.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/exchange-server-2019-and-2016-august-2023-security-update-installation-fails-on-non-english-operating-systems-ef38d805-f645-4511-8cc5-cf967e5d5c75
never done p2v but v2v before, using the starwind converter. it's a freeware and I just read it can also do p2v. proxmox itself is not available as a target, so you might have to convert your server to an esxi-vm, and then again from there to proxmox 🤔 that might be the slowest and one of the dirtiest ways to tackle this, but it might work
here's the link to the converter software: https://www.starwindsoftware.com/starwind-v2v-converter
It is easy to get to these drive self reporting data, but reading it can be tricky.
For Windows there are GUI tools like https://crystalmark.info/en/software/crystaldiskinfo/, that make all those values understandable even for people without much computer background.
For Linux the story is a bit different. Most current desktop environments do carry some functionality to read the S.M.A.R.T. data from the drives and display these data to the user. The user then has to find a way to interprete these seeminly random numbers. For things like the amound of written data to a drive (relevant for SSD) you have to pull out a calculator. Maybe there are also easily unterstandable GUI tools for Linux, I just haven't found them.