That’s the headset renegotiating the codec probably. Update the firmware in the app if you haven’t, maybe it’ll fix the issue.
That’s the headset renegotiating the codec probably. Update the firmware in the app if you haven’t, maybe it’ll fix the issue.
Momentum 4 owner here too. Can you provide the details of your distro? You already have aptx/aptx-hd available, it’s what you should use with them. Ima look into it when I get home.
Why? I have no context.
It is designed to be stable in spite of being regularly updated.
I use openSUSE. Zypper is a PITA compared to pacman.
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You might enjoy more Fedora KDE or Linux Mint.
That’ll depend entirely on your workflow. For me, it’s already good enough, but I don’t need much.
Oh, true, you don’t get previews of the windows inside. However, that shouldn’t be very hard to implement, so you might have luck if you ask for it to be in Plasma 6.
Gimp3 now has a roadmap, maybe it brings some improvements for you.
KDE plasma has it natively.
No, they’re plasmoids with the background removed.
– Not legal advice-- If you have evidence that it got scrapped for good, even if it’s copyright infringement, they can’t claim any damages. They, at best, can DMCA GitHub, but you’re VERY unlikely to get sentenced guilty in a trial (in the event of one, which won’t ever happen because they know).
–Not legal advice-- Except they can’t do clean-room development because copyright is viral. If they had access to the copyrighted source, any code they write on the matter, if it coincides with the copyrighted one to some extent, can be pursued for copyright claims (IBM v. Microsoft). For example, when there’s a leak of Windows source, ReactOS devs get super scared, because it really puts them on the line. Another example is Nouveau, which can’t accept anyone who has worked at NVIDIA. That being said, the company was not intending to do anything with it, so they can’t claim damages; ergo, OP is completely safe.
What you need to do is clean the dust off of your fans and ventilation filters (check guides or figure it as you go, but make sure to disconnect the battery and the fans from the mobo as soon as you open it). Then, repaste it with good thermal paste or some . I have liquid metal (thermal grizzly condoctonaut) on both of my laptops, and one of them which had overheated since day one, doesn’t anymore.
I prefer the T480 series (imo Thinkpad went downhill from there onwards). The non-s is a great off-road laptop, but for what OP is asking, the T480s seems like a more sensible choice.
I have a second-hand Thinkpad T480s that I love, I bought it for 250$ on ebay and replaced its battery because it was fried (+40$). I use it for school and it works flawlessly, around 8h of battery life in a well-configured OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. According to the specs sheet it shouldn’t be, but for some reason it is noticeably lighter than a friend of mine’s MacBook Air 2021.
What I really love about it is the ThinkDock Ultra (iirc 30$ on ebay), which lets me place the laptop on my table, and by just sliding a piece of plastic, it connects all of my peripherals in a second. I love this laptop so much that I’ll use it until it dies so hard that it can’t be fixed at all.
They’re an embedded device, plain and simple. Among other things, this means that there’s not a layer that handes off the hardware in a ready state to the OS, and not even an ACPI to tell them what and where the hardware is, the OS needs to already know via a device tree.