LMMS isn't really a DAW, as it can't really manipulate audio easily, only midi.
IIRC it can use audio files as instruments though I never used that feature so idk how limited it is , I believe other DAWs can import audio more directly
LMMS isn't really a DAW, as it can't really manipulate audio easily, only midi.
IIRC it can use audio files as instruments though I never used that feature so idk how limited it is , I believe other DAWs can import audio more directly
autistic complaining about units
ok so like I don't know if I've ever seen a more confusing use of units . at least you haven't used the p infix instead of the / in bandwith units .
like you used both upper case and lowercase in units but like I can't say if it was intentional or not ? especially as the letter that is uppercased should be uppercased ?
anyway
1Mb
is theoretically correct but you likely ment either one megabyte (1 MB) or one megibyte (MiB) rather than one megabit (1 Mb)
~325mb/s
95mb/s
and
9mb/s
I will presume you did not intend to write ~325 milibits per second , but ~325 megabits per seconds , though if you have used the 333 333 request count as in the segment you quoted , though to be fair op also made a mistake I think , the number they gave should be 3 exabits per second (3 Eb/s) or 380 terabytes per seconds (TB/s) , but that's because they calculated the number of requests you can make from a 1 gigabit (which is what I assume they ment by gbit) wrong , forgetting to account that a byte is 8 bits , you can only make 416 666 of 4 kB (sorry I'm not checking what would happen if they ment kibibytes sorry I underestimated how demanding this would be but I'm to deep in it now so I'm gonna take that cop-out) requests a second , giving 380 terabits per second (380 Tb/s) or 3.04 terabytes per second (3.04 TB/s) , assuming the entire packet is exactly 114 megabytes (114 MB) which is about 108.7 megibytes (108.7 MiB) . so anyway
packet size | theoretical bandwidth | |
---|---|---|
1 Mb | 416.7 Gb/s | 52.1 GB/s |
1 MB | 3.3 Tb/s | 416.7 GB/s |
1 MiB | 3.3 Tb/s | 416.7 GB/s |
300 kb | 125.0 Gb/s | 15.6 GB/s |
300 kB | 1000.0 Gb/s | 125.0 GB/s |
300 kiB | 1000.0 Gb/s | 125.0 GB/s |
30 kb | 12.5 Gb/s | 1.6 GB/s |
30 kB | 100.0 Gb/s | 12.5 GB/s |
30 kiB | 100.0 Gb/s | 12.5 GB/s |
hope that table is ok and all cause im in a rush yeah bye
most of the video was centred on the player
it wasn't ?? haha , the movement in the beginning is there because I didn't bother trimming the movement of the camera :P
pretty sure I have actually used it lol
I once deleted /usr/bin
while trying to delete /bin
(symbolic link) because I accidentally misformed it . don't remember why I had to recreate /bin
in the first place but it had something to do with installing java
Not the video you talked about , but I felt like its related to your last paragraph : How League of Legends Uses Abuse to Keep You Playing | That Jess . While she focuses more on other pieces of moderation than anticheat , she shows how LoLs developers are incentivized to not give a fuck and that they do , in fact , not give a fuck .
You might also find The CS2 Cheater Problem Has Gotten Goofy | TheWarOwl , which talks about Valve's failures to provide integrity , even despite , though he also says its a symptom of these failures , third party anticheat systems .
I'll also add that AI anticheat is not a silver bullet , it also requires upkeep which can be more expensive than classical anticheat systems .
And set the date format to YYYY.MM.DD for the entire world. Americans and Europeans can stop arguing.
this made me uncontrollably angry , its YYYY-MM-DD not YYYY.MM.DD
on the second of December 2009 a russian student died after chewing gum exploded in his mouth . he had a habit of dipping chewing gum in citric acid , however this time he accidentally used an unidentified explosive powder four times more powerfull than TNT which he had for home chemistry related reasons . his name was Vladimir Likhono
found on Wikipedia's List of unusual deaths
yeah but using mb/mB instead of M(i)b/M(i)B is a factor of 1 000 000 / 1 024 000 which is more than six magnitudes greater than 8
ah , for context I'm Lily
I mean we are throwing accuracy out the window by using milli anyway so who the hell cares , at this point I'm afraid people are using "m" to mean JEDEC mega , ie per IEC mebi ("Mi") , not even mentioning how stupid using the "p" infix looks when surrounded by SI or SI adjacent units
to be fair , neither the free software movement nor the open source movement (which are distinct ideologically) are explicitly socialist . in a way , especially the free software movement , they embody an extention of liberalism .
both of these movements focus on the individuals freedom and take issue not with developers/companies being systemically incentivized to develop closed source / nonfree software , but with individual developers/companies doing so . thus the solution taken is limited to the individual not to systemic change .