Google has banned whole accounts of some users for copy pasting comments on Youtube chat (similar to what people do on Twitch).
https://9to5google.com/2019/11/09/google-account-bans-youtube-emote-spam-markiplier
I wouldn’t gamble on it.
Google has banned whole accounts of some users for copy pasting comments on Youtube chat (similar to what people do on Twitch).
https://9to5google.com/2019/11/09/google-account-bans-youtube-emote-spam-markiplier
I wouldn’t gamble on it.
PSA: skirting their attempts to block ad blockers if you have a Google account you would rather keep may be unwise.
Google has been known for banning people for stupid crap, and this checks all the boxes.
While they were silent on this topic there was a gentlemen’s agreement that you could block ads. But now that they have voiced their opinion the jig is up.
I’d recommend people to use an alternative account if they are going to block anyway and they want to keep their gmail.
Well of course you can do it quickly with vim. Regardless, my suspicion is that OP deleted the lines manually, hence the need to mention it a couple of times. Otherwise, why would they even mention something you can do with grep in a literal second.
you mentioned it twice so I fear the worst, please tell me you didn’t remove 14000 lines manually using a text editor.
this is not audio specific but just an FYI, reinstalling does nothing on an updated system unless the program files were corrupted somehow, which is not normal.
to really reinstall a program from scratch you have to use apt-get purge or apt purge to ensure that global configurations files are removed, and pay attention to the logs printed out because some files may not be removed.
then, you have to manually delete your user configuration files for those programs, or create a new user un your computer to test it out first to see if user config files are generating any troubles.
just test it out.
some setups will work fine with wayland and some will work better with xorg.
there are of course ways solve those issues, but it’s easier to test both and use the one that works best for you.
wayland is the future, but the present is whatever works best for you.
Oh that sounds somehow more annoying than just having to pay it yourself, seeing as you have to do the calculations yourself anyway.
it was never about the convenience of the worker, but about making sure they pay. companies act as tax retention agents.
well you can put your “not in my computer” opinion in your ass. widespread benchmarks by established gaming journalists show good computers struggling.
you don’t have to know the internals of the engine. you just need some basic deduction powers.
does it look it look good compared to other AAA games? no
does it run fast? no
ergo. the engine is crap.
the same thing happened to cd projekt red but they ditched their engine after the cyberpunk fiasco. they will just pay epic
“we have worked a lot on PC performance. wanted to reach performance parity with consoles for release on similar hardware and we achieved that, However, our teams will continue working on improvements and integrating technologies like fsr and dlss in the future. “
I’ve seen some nasty videos I’d rather forget where they scream and cry all the way through it.
it’s only a problem if there’s enough interference to prevent the card from linking at 16x with the pcie bus, otherwise lightspeed won’t have measurable effects at that point, there’s no processing done by the riser.
if the riser is rated for 16x you shouldn’t have any slowdowns.
you can always check if the card is linked at full speed. if it’s at 16x, then there’s no difference.
yeah I got a fancy lab power supply but stopped at oscilloscopes, those things are expensive.
it’s still cheap and fun to do a lot of stuff, but now I wanna build a sound-card based oscilloscope.
dd is good if the destination disk is equal or bigger, unless you are brave enough to shrink the source partition.
if you are moving to a smaller disk for whatever reason (hdd to sdd) then you need to fallback to a different method, which takes us back to cp/rsync.
why not? sudo cp -ax
foots the bill.
I assume people prefer rsync because you may need to run it twice, but unless you tick all the boxes rsync won’t copy capabilities (see getcap /usr/bin/rsh
)
sudo cp -ax is short and sweet and does everything right.
it’s not the recommended way but it’s how I’ve been doing.
you format the new drives and just cp -a -x from the running os to the destination, update the destination fstab, then treat the new drives as an os with a broken boot and continue from there.
they may be smart enough to avoid telling you they are voting republican.
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