![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4271bdc6-5114-4749-a5a9-afbc82a99c78.png)
I got a surprising amount of use out of a similarly configured C720 as a general purpose portable machine.
I got a surprising amount of use out of a similarly configured C720 as a general purpose portable machine.
Essentially no processors follow a standard. There are some that have become a de facto standard and had both backwards compatibility and clones produced like x86. But it is certainly not an open standard, and many lawsuits have been filed to limit the ability of other companies to produce compatible replacement chips.
RISC-V is an attempt to make an open instruction set that any manufacturer can make a compatible chip for, and any software developer can code for.
With software that misuses /tmp, I’m more worried about burning out my SSD endurance than running out of RAM.
The screen turning off when it automatically locks is an added bonus; the priority is to be able to command the system to simultaneously lock and turn off the screen. You’re correct that the setting at zero seconds safely achieves that.
I’ve had other, more stupid uses for running commands, though I don’t think any are actively in use.
Taking actions on network reconfiguration, charge completion, and SMART failure are all things that spring to mind. It’s nice to be able to set those kinds of things in a GUI rather than putting them in /etc/something.d
What I want is not (just) that the screen turns off when the lock timer times out, but that I can push ‘lock’ or a key combination and have the system lock and the screen turn off immediately.
The new ‘when locked, turn off screen’ setting should help with this, but setting it too low will presumably make it hard to unlock.
For running backups, ‘after a period of inactivity’ could help.
It still seems like the removal of a useful feature.
I expect they are talking about the ‘irrevocably’ part, as one of the core tenets of GDPR is that consent can be withdrawn.
I couldn’t say whether or not that applies here.
I use it for turning off the screen when the screen is locked, allowing background tasks to continue.
It’s also useful to run things like backups when the system is more likely to be idle.
Swifts and Mirages can be under 900kg.
HDDs can fail at any time, with or without warning.
It’s not the bridge rectifier, but it’s an artifact of the operation of the switchmode power supply. Similar effects are often described as 'coil whine '.
The switching operation varies in duty cycle and frequency depending on load, and isn’t absolutely stable so oscillates a little bit. This switching supply is often in the audio range; typically between about 5kHz and 200kHz depending on design and load.
Changing current and magnetic field causes the physical components (particularly transformers/inductors) to change size and shape, and this vibration causes audible noise. At some conditions, it will resonate at an audible frequency and be loud. At other conditions, it might not resonate and/or the frequency is outside the audible range, so it’s silent.
Mains transformers do the same, causing the characteristic 50/60Hz hum. You’ll also hear the same out of cellphone chargers.
Nothing to worry about.
Secondhand stuff can be really cheap if you know where to look, but the drawbacks are usually power and noise.
I wouldn’t start worrying until 50k+ hours.
There should be a way to view SMART info and that includes an hour count.
Boeing and Microsoft: same shit, different cloud.
Bear in mind many models also have voice recognition, and the Bluetooth can potentially pick up the MAC on every phone in the car.
Biggest question to me is why you need an IP in the first place?
Yeah, YT’s current anti-adblock crusade means you need a proper ad blocker built into the browser or a third party client.
There are AdBlock options for Android that can work on apps. Generally you need to route all internet traffic via the AdBlock app which requires root, a faux-VPN, or a PiHole type solution.
It can usually only do host-level blocking but that’s generally enough.
There’s been various desktop-grade plans regarding use of nuclear rockets, both in the atmosphere and not. Never underestimate what engineers can come up with.
I think what they were trying to argue is that the mercury emitted would be no worse than the mercury already emitted as a byproduct of power plants.
Most rocket operators/manufacturers run on razor thin margins or at a loss, sustained by state subsidies or wishful venture capitalists.
It appears that the door design is unchanged from the previous generation.
The problem is not with any specific part of the design or any model of plane. Grounding the Max again will not help past fixing this specific fault.
It is the fundamental corporate culture. The same poor QA, both in design and production, affects all current Boeing aircraft.
It was a few years back, but after it hit ChromeOS EOL I’m pretty sure it just got some KDE distro; I don’t think I even used LXDE. Didn’t need to do much.
I was mostly using it for web browsing, forums, spreadsheets, documentation etc. Nothing particularly strenuous.
I did have one really fun time of modifying PDF engineering drawings by opening them in Libre Office Draw which it handled kinda OK.
It did get a 240GB SSD but everything else was soldered.