Google is at fault here for creating the software-defined garbage, but they’re not literally selling the products, are they?
Google is at fault here for creating the software-defined garbage, but they’re not literally selling the products, are they?
AOL came on floppies originally, but the quality was so poor that you could barely rewrite them.
I didn’t find an alternative, when I looked a few months ago.
There is a USB-C IR blaster that exists, but the Tiqiaa/ZaZaRemote app is awful.
You are 10% hydrogen already.
They’d be expensive to run but it would likely only be for a few days per year.
“Pay for more electricity” might not work very well, if everybody in a region uses resistive heat at the same time. I’m not sure what the solution is… maybe an overprovisioned power grid, cheaper battery tech, or tanks of renewable backup fuel like dimethyl ether?
Well, if you currently have this problem and want to fix it, I’ve shown you the way. OpenWrt is free software.
Otherwise, there’s no point arguing about it.
Multi-hour downloads have been a thing since capacity was measured in kbps. If a simple TCP transfer causes excessive queueing, then the queueing algorithm is broken.
A router with OpenWrt and luci-app-sqm
can fix this problem, at least for an internet connection with a fixed speed limit.
One major AAA game update will likely break your connection
One person in the house uploading anything will cripple your ability to make ANY request
You are describing symptoms of bufferbloat, not capacity problems.
Between 2017 and today, it was a mostly-blank page with the letter “x”: https://web.archive.org/web/20230722020649/http://x.com/
If we could start from scratch, I would define an absolute temperature scale where water freezes at 500, roughly 1.83x the kelvin scale.
So 4xx is freezing, and the max survivable temperature is around 570. (Water boils at 683, but freezing and boiling can’t both be round numbers on an absolute scale.)
chrome : chromium :: vscode : vscodium
That’s a good pun. Clearly the authors have mastered the second hardest problem in computer science.