not to worry!
not to worry!
It’s very mass market, not particularly well informed general news source and this is a specialist community where this is relevant to its specialist field
Thank you
Thanks, further information could be interesting. Do you know if it requests connectivity on every startup?
Because it’s not principally about privacy. I don’t want adverts or forced changes to the product I purchased made after sale.
Not sure what you mean by “seek access through open wifi”
Stuff like this
My reason for stipulating that is that lot of people saying it do so either from ignorance (they simply don’t believe/understand that you might not be able to opt out) or on the basis of outdated information, e.g. “I bought my TV ten years ago and never had to do this”. Your experience being in the recent past I guess I could try this as a sale stipulation point, thanks.
Thanks, don’t need touch and the price is a bit on the heavy side
Great! Could you link a 60" monitor?
Thanks, neither of these seem to go over 43"
I’m guessing those aren’t as big and you have to buy them by the hundred
Thanks!. Two posters suggesting I try here so I’ll try that first and maybe this forum if not because what I want to ask about is a TV so not audio!
I don’t think anyone is claiming otherwise are they? A large part of his appeal is accessibility- you don’t need any preparation or training to watch his videos- an excel file not so much
I’m sorry to say but it’s Windows. You never really know. Have you considered getting an old optiplex on Amazon Renewed and putting Debian and Jellyfin on that?
Your hardware is more than capable. I’m running on a ten year old dell optiplex and don’t have these issues. I suspect your issue is Windows, more specifically something else on windows, such as antivirus, updates etc. blocking disk I/O
You should celebrate with some upside down cake
Err Windows xp launched in October 2001, not the 90’s. The ‘successor’ version, Vista, launched in 2007, really only for home use. Windows 7, the successor for schools, offices etc, released 2009.
The OpenBSD project maintains portable versions of many subsystems as packages for other operating systems. Because of the project’s preferred BSD license, which allows binary redistributions without the source code, many components are reused in proprietary and corporate-sponsored software projects. The firewall code in Apple’s macOS is based on OpenBSD’s PF firewall code,[6] Android’s Bionic C standard library is based on OpenBSD code,[7] LLVM uses OpenBSD’s regular expression library,[8] and Windows 10 uses OpenSSH (OpenBSD Secure Shell) with LibreSSL.[9]
are you sure that you don’t already have this built in? https://support.google.com/gboard/answer/9108773?hl=en&co=GENIE.Platform%3DAndroid
Op as others has commented already, percussion instruments certainly do have a pitch. For a very obvious example of a well known tune, check this video from 5 minutes 30 seconds of Phil Collins performing in the air tonight. It’s very obvious that he’s got his drums tuned so that he can play a melody.