HMS Trusty
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trusty:
- HMS Trusty (1782) was a 50-gun fourth-rate launched in 1782, used as a troopship from 1799 and a prison ship from 1809, and broken up in 1815. Because Trusty served in the navy's Egyptian campaign (8 March to 2 September 1801), her officers and crew qualified for the clasp "Egypt" to the Naval General Service Medal, which the Admiralty issued in 1847 to all surviving claimants.[1]
- HMS Trusty (1855) was an Aetna-class ironclad floating battery launched in 1855 and broken up in 1864
- HMS Trusty (1866) was a tugboat launched in 1866, renamed in 1917 as HMS Trustful and broken up in 1920
- HMS Trusty (1918) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1918 and broken up in 1936
- HMS Trusty (N45) was a T-class submarine launched in 1941 and broken up in 1947
Sources
- "No. 21077". The London Gazette. 15 March 1850. pp. 791–792.
gollark: IIRC some Amlogic/Rockchip ones can even use mainline Linux.
gollark: They don't have very good IO, is the problem. Random TV boxes are better and can sometimes run less horrible firmware.
gollark: Well, they might be useful if you want random small-screen devices for controlling/monitoring things.
gollark: However, the "trusted" bit of the name is a misnomer, in that it's "trusted" by arbitrary companies of some kind and not the user themselves.
gollark: It has some nice-for-users features like that you can, say, make your disk's contents unreadable if you take it out and stick it in another computer (without also having the TPM to do things to).
References
Colledge, J. J.; Warlow, Ben (2006) [1969]. Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy (Rev. ed.). London: Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-281-8.
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