I forgot to mention,
look in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/
interesting files are,
scaling_governor
#do $ cat scaling_available_governors
#to figure out which governors you can use
#you must also load the equivalent kernel module
#ie, cpufreq_(powersave|performance|conservative|ondema
Hey, I had the same problem. Here's how I solved it.
First, the annoying high pithced sound emitting from the motherboard?
https://github.com/fenrus75/powertop
Download and Compile it, only if apt-get's version ain't got the
'--auto-tune' option.
First issue,
$ powertop --calibrate #and wai
What happened ?
Thanks a lot guys
Nothing wrong in the files you attached...
I did follow instructions right down the line (didn't need the 'little bash
function.') Ran $sudo apt-get install linux-libre64 linux-libre64-header and
$ sudo update-grub and rebooted. It looks like it is going to work, though I
see a message for a moment something about 'nouveau fault a' bu
Okay, what should I do here?
Tor + GPG + sever in a country called Not America is the way to go. Running
your own server is okay, but very very very few people can or will do that.
Ideally, a system without severs in the first place would be best.
Distributed systems. Right now the only thing established like that is
i
I think that too lloydsmart
There is also the gEDA project.
Yes, I also want to talk about Gnome Flashback
I wouldn't use such an account, personally. Even if the provider is totally
legit, your communication with their servers is being done entirely in
cleartext. It's standard practise to at least enable TLS on SMTP, POP3 and
IMAP connections these days. And personally, I'd insist on HTTPS for we
How did you curl'd the live streams? Any special option or parameter that you
had to insert? For example with the m3u8 links that were specified above, are
you able to curl them?
Another new release:
https://savannah.nongnu.org/forum/forum.php?forum_id=8275
Significantly, ships now turn red like they're supposed to, finally.
There's a grain of truth to it: you can't necessarily trust some stranger
running a mail server to keep your mail secret. Governments can demand that
they turn over their private key, and then all of your email is compromised
the same way it would be if your HTTP connection had been snooped.
I totally agree with 'Chris'! Freedom has a price: we need to change our
habits about computer use, (and it isn't difficult to do).
I forgot to upload IceCat's warning -- here it is
I signed up for an account with a local email provider. I logged into the
webmail, and noticed that it used http (and not https). I asked the
administrator about it; he told me that the danger is merely theoretical, and
that no one has been compromised in these circumstances.
I connected
18 matches
Mail list logo