PCChipsM922U

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 7 months ago

😬... trailerpark family πŸ˜‚...

[–] PCChipsM922U 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Oh man 😬... you don't wanna share that in this comm 😬...

[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 8 months ago

No, her dad is a music teacher.

[–] PCChipsM922U 3 points 8 months ago

Pictures don't seem to show up... but I'm guessing this is a caching issue, so it should be resolved by itself.

[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 8 months ago

Have to... mods are always watching.

[–] PCChipsM922U 19 points 10 months ago (2 children)

In the cheap one, we have two perfectly flat brass pieces pressing against each other.

I'll bet you any ammount you want, that's not brass. It's iron with brass coating.

[–] PCChipsM922U 13 points 11 months ago (2 children)

So? It's not like you're gonna get banned here, lol πŸ˜‚.

[–] PCChipsM922U 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

OK, I think I solved it :). Just needed to manually set some parameters in /etc/pulse/daemon.conf.

resample-method = soxr-hq
avoid-resampling = false
enable-remixing = yes
default-sample-rate = 44100
alternate-sample-rate = 48000

I think defining the default and alternative sample rate mostly solved the problem, the other settings were just in case, I didn't check if it worked with or without them.

[–] PCChipsM922U 1 points 1 year ago

So, how do I force it to use a particular sample rate? Cuz I think the streams are 44.1KHz (as is with most audio) and if it speeds up, the sample rate should be set to 48KHz if my logic serves me correctly.

This is just a temporary fix, I'll switch to PipeWire as soon as I can, I just wanna do some work in my workshop and listen to music...

[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's... confusing 🀨... birthday party in space, but the main character has to fight asgar the destroyer after the party 🀣.

[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You used the tutorial or set it up on your own?

[–] PCChipsM922U 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Morally wrong/rotten... depends on the society. In our "modern" (depends how you look on things) society, this might be considered wrong, but in some tribe somewhere, it might be normal as you or I going to work in our suits.

Regarding legality, it's probably not legal, since most laws that prohibit/endulge this or that are passed for adults, not minors, so the law is probably meant for adults only. Minors are probably excluded from this, so they should wear a bra/swimsuite.

My 2 cents...

 
 
125
Average LateX user (sh.itjust.works)
 
 
 
36
He uses Arch BTW (sh.itjust.works)
 
 

At first, I thought it was just a temporary glitch or something, but a few days pass and I still can't comment from any if my accounts (I have 5, 2 are on this instance). And I think it's only exclusive to the Main community, not any other community... the weird thing is, I tried from 4 accounts, the 2 on this instance and another 2, none of them can comment. In particular, I wanted to reply after this comment.

https://readit.buzz/m/[email protected]/t/15368/-/comment/113606

Every time it just returns a "language_not_allowed" error. This in Jerboa, I haven't tried commenting from the web UI.

EDIT: Now this is interesting. I'm in the web UI now and if I follow the link I shared in this post, it says it's a KBin instance and asks for my login credentials. I noticed there is something funky with the URL and I really have no idea how I'm following this community through KBin 🀨.

EDIT2: OK, I pinpointed the problem. The link to the reply leads to KBin because the reply is from a KBin user account. I can't seem to be able to reply to that particular comment (seems I can reply to anything that is from a Lemmy instance, but not KBin).

Here's the post.

https://sh.itjust.works/post/308065

Now scroll down and find a comment from a user named ScrumblesPAbernathy and try to reply to that comment, see if you get the same error as me (language_not_allowed in Jerboa, or just hangs in the web UI).

EDIT3: OK, the solution to the problem was to select English as the language in which you wanna write the reply. There is no such option in Jerboa (yet), but the web UI has it and if you just select English, the reply goes through.

177
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by PCChipsM922U to c/networking
 

Not really networking related (kinda... sorta...), but just had to share it. I think his granma did it πŸ˜‚.

Thinking about calling her on my next networking gig, lol πŸ˜‚.

 

This is a (quite long, LOL :D) tutorial I wrote on the subject and I believe it covers most user scenarios, so it uses safe methods (known to work in generic scenarios, when the printer's manufacturer and model are unknown). I also tried to write it as plain (simple) as I possibly could, so that even regular users (users that are not tech wizards, but can find their way around a computer and can probably install a distro like Ubuntu on a PC) can configure the Linux print server and add the shared printer on a Windows install.

You can download the tutorial in PDF and DOC from here or here. Also, here are the plain (unarchived) PDF and DOC files.

I hope this tutorial helps users that have given up using their old (but working) printers, just because they don't have x64 (64-bit) Windows drivers :).

 

Unfortunately, this printer doesn't have support for x64/64-bit Windows OSes (only x86/32-bit Windows drivers), but the Xerox Phaser 3117 does, so you can use the 3117's drivers on any x64 Windows OS :) (Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, 10, 11). You can download the drivers from the following links: Download, Mirror.

I've also included a PDF/DOC that explains in detail how to install the drivers, so that the printer works. Follow them exactly as they are written and the printer should work ;).

 

I did this fix a few weeks ago and thought I'd share it :). There are sites from where you can download the appropriate files and dumps, but here is everything in one place.

This tutorial requires you to be handy with a screwdriver and a soldering iron (the patch is in hardware), so it's not for literally everyone. If you're somewhat tech savvy and know your way with a soldering iron, you can try this tutorial :).

The beauty of this hardware patch is that it works with any version of the firmware on the Xerox Phaser 3100MFP, regardless of the input/output ports as well. But, just in case, I've also included the patched versions of the firmwares in the archive (2.07t and 3.01). You can upgrade the firmware via FTP or with the Xerox Companion Suite. My version of the printer didn't have an Ethernet port, so I had to use the Xerox Companion Suite, which didn't work on Windows 10... maybe I should've tried on Windows Vista or 7 (the suite is intended to be used on Vista), but thought of this later on, when I already did the hardware patch, LOL :D.

I've also included videos in the archive that cover soldering/desoldering SMD components with a regular soldering iron, as well as a video on how to disassemble the Xerox Phaser 3100MFP.

The archive with everything included can be downloaded from here. Also, here are the plain (unarchived) PDF and DOC files (they included more mirrors for the archive at the end of the documents).

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