That could track because Nintendo hasn’t gone after Moonstone island either and that uses food / barns to store captured “spirits”.
That could track because Nintendo hasn’t gone after Moonstone island either and that uses food / barns to store captured “spirits”.
I felt the same however Organic Maps did have many businesses. And with Street Complete I can correct any errors when I visit.
It may simply be my area, but I so recommend organic maps over Osmand for business and POI lookups
Oh wow! That goes back far, I had no idea. Thanks for enlightening!
What do you mean by putting Honda and VW in the list?
It’ll be very hard to prove they respect the button. Considering they probably sourced the data immediately after the button was put in place.
Verify that your device does not share your contact book and texts over bluetooth (will break the infotainment built in “call X person” feature should you use that over your phones assistant for some reason)
Its usually in the bluetooth settings for a particular device paired to your phone
deleted by creator
Anyone happen to know where the sim card is?
I would find it appealing to have WiFi only
Been using vite for a while and haven’t had to think about it.
Glad node is catching up. But it’d spare even more headaches if it natively supported ES6 modules
What I would do if look at every point in the video and audio chain and validate they all support hardware decoding (or passthrough / direct stream) for your supported codec.
Based on what you told me. I know your chain might look something like this:
Server
> Network
> streamer
> HDMI
> TV
> audio cable
> receiver or amp
> audio cable
> speaker
For your two speaker setup, is it hooked up with a digital cable or analogue?
If the stereo is analogue, does it support audio at a different sampling and bitrate than what the player puts out?
Or if it’s digital, does it support AC3? In a quick search I saw complaints about EAC3 not working well despite being advertised as such. So I wouldn’t rule it out.
When you stream from the Roku, you can look in your media servers settings to see if it’s transcoding the video or audio. However for the stereo system, or whatever is powering the speakers, you would have to reference its supported formats.
I did find the Roku Developers page and something noteworthy is
Supported video codecs
Videos can be encoded using H.264, HEVC (H.265), VP9, or AV1 (DASH only) codecs.
Something else that may be a good lead, looking at their supported audio codecs it lists
16bit | 48 Khz | Passthrough
For AC3, this is a but ambiguous to me, if given 44.1hkz (much more popular), will it pass through 44.1khz? Will it be delayed? Will it refuse to play? They also don’t specify if this is hardware accelerated or software decoding within the Roku.
If the Roku’s cpu is being fully utilized decoding video in software, it may not have the cpu to decode the audio reliably. This is unlikely as most streamers are built with hardware decoding support to enable cheaper smaller lower power components to be used.
I did see on the forums people recommend AAC for general support but Roku themselves recommenf E-AC3 for 5.1 audio.
People often recommend forcing Direct Stream and disabling transcoding as a troubleshooting step to force out the container formats that won’t work. It may also be worth a test and see if you lose audio.
As for where I look specifically, I tend to look for the most verbose documentation I can find, the Roku developer docs i linked would be what I would look for. I also did a lot of research on audio gear which helped as prior knowledge. Audio-science review forums taught me a lot over time from reading reviews.
As an aside I generally recommend Open Source formats where possible (AC3 and EAC3 are not) because they tend to have broader support in perpetuity. I also find Android players tend to have very broad codec support (piggybacking mobile phone components).
But I don’t like to recommend new hardware in general because not everyone can buy a new device.
This is a bit all over the place at this point, but I hope it gives you some leads for determining the cause!
I usually don’t skip an opportunity to rip on Roku but it’s possible the player supports the video codec but the audio is being software rendered.
Our stereo system also added delay for some codecs so we had to change that as well
We had to retranscode some of our library because my dad really likes his Roku
Trickle down economics?
The thing is the 7800x3d is a gem of a CPU. It’s has more compute than I could use and it’s low power and runs cool.
I’m going to run it until I can’t anymore, and I’ll continue to upgrade around the AMD ecosystem unless they stop being awesome.
I disagree. I bought a game for all the features it had at the time of buying it. There is no avenue for a consumer to push back against publishers changing that
I also am very fond of 8.10. It was my first exposure to Linux :)
Adding to RSS.
I use FreshRSS to sync to Readably over Fever API.
Works very well!
He did say exactly that in the interview when called out. It’s in the twitter thread linked.
Towards the end.
The lack of light could mess with your circadian rhythm. Causing you to sleep through alarms or miss the benefits of sunrise / sunset. Moot if you wake up before sunrise.
This is just my personal experience.
I’m sorry who in their right mind signed off on this patent
Thats literally any online game server