I have 2 different multipoint headphones and neither can, but I can’t say for certain that it’s not possible. With the main one I use, once you start playing audio on one of the paired devices, it’ll completely switch over to that device.
I have 2 different multipoint headphones and neither can, but I can’t say for certain that it’s not possible. With the main one I use, once you start playing audio on one of the paired devices, it’ll completely switch over to that device.
Think of it like a club with a max capacity of 10 people, where some people have VIP cards. If a person with a VIP card wants to get into the club, the bouncer will kick out one of the people inside that doesn’t have a VIP card to make space for them.
For a more technical explanation:
There are several processors on computers and each can be in use by 1 process at a time. Different processes can get different amounts of time based on their priority (called niceness in Linux) and they’ll be removed from the processor once their time is up until their next share of time.
On a real-time kernel some processes are marked as real-time (certain range of niceness values, can’t remember the exact range). If a process that is real-time says it needs some processor time, a process that isn’t real-time that’s currently running will be immediately ripped off the processor to make room for the real-time process.
It can save you a lot of time when it’s right though:
Worth keeping in mind that the steam deck uses a distro based on arch, so it might be inflating the arch numbers in that steam survey.
Are you by chance kanye west? In all seriousness it’s because fish sticks sounds like fish dicks
Then by that logic, redhat is leeching off the work of the Linux kernel developers and the other Foss software in redhat
Oh my god those popups for new features drive me insane. Yes teams, I know I can do account switching now because you’ve told me the last 10 times I opened the app.
You can change the config so you don’t need to give the password every time.
Adding the persist option only requires it once every few minutes within a terminal session.
https://manpages.debian.org/bullseye/doas/doas.conf.5.en.html#persist
In my area you’re required to take at least 4 or 5 years (can’t remember which one) of classes involving another language throughout middle and high school. But we never have a need outside of those classes to use the language we learned, so most people forget it.
When there isn’t really a need to use another language, it’s mostly a waste of time learning one.
You can use the magic bytes to detect it. Pretty sure windows executables have MZ as their magic bytes
That seems like the most likely reason for why it happened
Those damn mongorians!
2 scenarios where it can be exploited:
Acquiring the ability to compromise a server or perform an adversary-in-the-middle impersonation of it to target a device that’s already configured to boot using HTTP
Already having physical access to a device or gaining administrative control by exploiting a separate vulnerability.
If you want more information on what your company can do to help protect against ransomware, CISA’s stop ransomware site has good advice:
Along with what others said, things you are interested in, demographic data, etc. The content you choose to watch on tiktok or products you click on on temu reveals a lot of valuable information about what ads might be most effective on you so they can target ads to you.
With wear levelling on SSDs you may be able to recover some of the data
Thank you very much!
Does anyone know what show this is from?
They yearn for the mines