Probably because there’s also permission to use the X11 socket.
Probably because there’s also permission to use the X11 socket.
Reminds me of this skit: https://youtu.be/oOFlN_qTCf0
Not exactly the same, but an electron beam puts a lot of noise in the image: https://youtu.be/Uf4Ux4SlyT4
Also I’ve heard the international space station gets a lot of dead pixels on their cameras from cosmic radiation.
I think you’d have to modify the edid, since you’re setting a custom refresh rate, not a hidden one.
I’ve use wxEDID to force enable VRR before.
Well, aren’t you glad they’re removing go-git
then!
I’ve heard of it, but I didn’t think it was financially viable for an individual to pay for though.
Someone commented on another video that they saw the Ram Air Turbine extended. So they would’ve lost power, supporting your electrical fire theory. Also it seems extending the RAT disables some safeguards, that can cause the wheels to lock and catch fire.
The other video: https://youtu.be/EPiNC5JpEYs
There’s a couple python libraries listed on their website, flywire.ai/apps. No idea if they allow for proper simulation though.
For projects like this where they’re hooking into the compiled python binaries, you really want to match the version.
Like 3.11 and 3.12 were pretty much released a year apart, a lot can change implementation wise.
After reading their blog, it seems like it doesn’t support Python 3.12, and it looks like you’re using Python 3.12.
Also if you tap on the ‘kebab’ menu and press View Source
, you can copy the message.
My understanding is that most of that all lives in mesa, and the kernel driver basically just abstracts the hardware.
I swear Lemmy comments for YouTube had a feature that let you open it for any page, but it seems the GitHub and Firefox page been deleted.
Edit: Looks like I’ve still got a fork: https://github.com/Steve-Tech/Reddit-Comments-for-YouTube (it says Reddit, but works for Lemmy too)
Does it also restore the content of unsaved files of the application?
That’s up to the application.
If not, I’ll prefer
systemctl hibernate
. I wonder, what this new feature is for.
I believe this is for storing the position of specific windows, for multi-window applications (e.g. GIMP’s multi-window mode). So hibernation is very unrelated.
There’s The Serial Port, It’s not really ‘home networks’, but he finds and sets up very early (~80-90s) ISP gear and explains how it works and the history of it. Similar to how Ben Eater uses an ‘old’ 6502 to explain stuff.
I’ve had the same experience, you’re much better off RDPing into the VM. But I’d like to know if anyone has a better solution that doesn’t require an extra GPU.
On Asus motherboards you can enable ‘Memory Context Restore’, and it’ll remember the training. Unfortunately it seems rapid changes in the weather make my system unstable with it on.
I’m pretty sure schools must already have lockdown alarms in Australia (and drills every few years), so it’s surprising that this isn’t already a thing in America, especially with its issues.
They don’t even need to be the same process. I’m pretty sure that’s just a common practice if something needs both protocols, but there’s nothing stopping you from having a web server on TCP 443 and a VPN server on UDP 443. Ports are an abstraction brought by each protocol, they aren’t in anyway related.