Alawami

@Alawami@lemmy.ml
1 Post – 10 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

Random reads are still slower than sequential in SSD. try torrenting for a year on SSD, then benchmark then defragment then benchmark. it will be very measureable difference. you may need some linux filesystem like XFS as im not sure if there is a way to defrag SSDs in windows.

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Here comes another westerner thinking his feelings towards x government are universal.. if anything that approval percentage seems lower than I would expect.

The real crime here is that a 5yo android phone is running 7 which was released 8 years ago?

Motion blur just makes it look like you're drunk

Someone hasn't tried motion blur since 2004 GTA

Why not? you would be surprised with the stability a high quality wifi router provides.

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yea you might actually be right. I Played with my fstab too much years ago, and never thought of that until now

But does that flag affect manually running xfs_fsr?

At least you can talk to someone at your ISP who can change things, in 10 years I was literally never been able to contact someone who knows anything about networks in any of the 3 big ISPs here.. all I get is this:

"oh you have speed issue? Let me "refresh" your connection"

"No sir i have no speed issues, I just need to be able to open IPv6 ports"

"Oh trying to changing the cable port?"

"Sigh.. can you transfer me to advanced support plz"

"Sure thing"

Advanced support: "So you having speed issues?"

"No i just need to be able to open IPv6 ports"

"Ah ports, you can do that from your router settings i think"

"No sir, you are the only ISP here where I can't open ports or receive any ICMP on my ipv6"

"Let me see.. i'll refresh your connections"

And it's the same of many different issues, you can't get a hold of anyone who can change anything in any layer about any config. Take it or leave it..

Gnome software store is absolute trash that never worked, so i had to use dnf from terminal. That's about it.

I'm pretty sure running XFS defrag will defrag without trimming no matter the type of block device.

Edit: yea you might actually be right. I Played with my fstab too much years ago, and never thought of that untill now

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Wouldn't that be super complicated in linux? On windows they had huge probelms with frame timings and vsync and only later got fixed.. that was on windows which has single DE and single display server model/protocol. On linux i feel that would be a total mess between wayland and xorg and different DEs. Especially considering the DE controls much of the frames timings, vrr and vsync in wayland. Hell even gnome still can't get basic vrr frames to display in correct order.