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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 7th, 2023

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  • I’ve never seen this “just” happen, but have seen it during events like switching from headphones to speakers and such.

    You may also have your app volumes linked to your master channels, meaning when you lower the sound on your master with something like a key combo, then it lowers the individual app volumes as well, which is generally not something you’d want enabled.

    Apps at full, and using PCM/Master channel for general volume is pretty much the “default”.




  • Probably going to be Frigate. It’s meant for NVR, and has easy time management tools for review, plus you can setup an easy monitor stream with RTSP or ON IF to watch live from elsewhere.

    You could also engage it’s inference for doing simple identification or animals and objects to tag clips where something happens in a Region of Interest.











  • Labels/Tags are a product feature, not part of email standards. Meaning: it’s not a thing when looking at the raw mail server data.

    Each product handles this in their own way, and the tool being used to export your mail from one host/product to another would be what is handling that, if at all. Gmail probably just uses folders because that is part of the structure a mail server would have.

    I believe Proton’s import tools handles this correctly from Gmail using both labels as folders and preserving tags, but I believe Thunderbird just puts them in folders as is standard.

    You can double check by looking at the raw data exported from any mail service. You could probably easily write a quick script to handle getting tag info and applying it yourself, though it could be quite slow.


  • Try disabling the power saving settings for the machine, and make sure your power profile is set to ‘performance’. See if that changes anything.

    I am certain this is a power issue, but where it’s stemming from us difficult to tell without actually seeing the machine.

    Would also be useful if you check your BIOS for voltage settings for your CPU/MEM, and your PCIE lanes.





  • just_another_person@lemmy.worldtoLinux@lemmy.mlGentoo experience?
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    11 days ago

    That’s…an opinion that is not backed by any facts at all. What in the world are you talking about with “bloat” 🤣

    So you’re a newbie, and making lots of wild claims and taking awfully opinionated positions in this thread all over the place. I don’t think you want help, so just be on your way 👍


  • This…is not accurate. Not being pedantic, just correcting the misunderstanding so you know the difference.

    LTS releases are built to be stable on pinned versions of point release kernel and packages. This ensures that a team can expect to not have to worry about major changes or updates for X years.

    Rolling Releases are simply updating new packages to whatever versions become available when released. Pretty much the opposite of an expected stable release for any period of time.

    Doesn’t have anything to with “forced reinstall” of anything. If you’ve been having to fully reinstall your OS every time a new LTS is released, you are kind of doing extra unnecessary work.