transporter_ii

joined 1 month ago
[–] transporter_ii@programming.dev 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I saw a video a while back where they routed audio through a banana, and nobody could pick out the audio that went through said banana. I can't find it, but here is a guy expanding on that video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fmCy686IC8

[–] transporter_ii@programming.dev 12 points 1 week ago (4 children)

This seems to be Linux's Microslop. Not only did they add it to Systemd, they banned users on Reddit for just talking about it. I laughed when Microsoft banned users for using the term Microslop. Not so funny now, I guess.

I did finally get Cinnamon to restart one time. There were some minor issues, but it started back up and was usable for a few minutes. After that, it hung up so hard that only a reboot fixed it. One issue on restart was that the start menu was kind of wonky, like a web page that had lost its css file.

For anyone following this, I found the following link to be helpful.

https://askubuntu.com/questions/143838/how-do-i-restart-cinnamon-from-the-tty

OK, I just did some testing, and it was not exactly what I was expecting. For one, it's kind of hard to intentionally use a lot of memory. The best thing I found was opening a large amount of tabs in Firefox. I maybe could increase my swap space, but I never hung my system up. I shut down the vm and used about 18 gig of ram. I then started the vm.

The deal is, Stacer isn't exactly accurate when the VM starts. For some reason, memory usage (on Stacer) drops when the vm starts up. Checking the system resource monitor, memory usage briefly jumped to 28 gig in it. It never reflected this on Stacer. However, without the full 16 gig of ram allocated to the vm, Windows boots up, and then shuts back down after a brief period.

I stopped and started Windows numerous times. It would actually make Linux stutter as the memory maxed out, but it never froze up to the point I had to reboot to fix it.

The swap space did about max out during some of this. I do think I will increase the swap space a little.

It's pretty much a default install of Linux Mint, with Cinnamon. I haven't even installed that many programs, yet. Pretty much a vm, vscode, 4 browsers, gimp, and some small utilities.

We need a PAC and to primary any politician that voted for these laws to begin with.

[–] transporter_ii@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

That question has a lot of ways to go in. A swap file on Linux or Windows running in my vm? Also, I have a new PC with 32 gig of RAM. I allocated half to the vm when it is running. This kind of brings me to why I asked this question to begin with. I have Stacer installed and I've never seen my memory usage go over halfway (Stacer graph) when I have the vm running. I pretty much always have my vm running, because I need it running. I shouldn't be running out of memory. If it shows my 16ish gigs of ram used when the vm is fired up, then I should have 16ish gigs of ram that I've never seen being used.

I really wouldn't think the vm is running out of memory. There is 16 gig allocated and all it has running is IIS server, VisualStudio, and Firefox. I rarely open much more than that on it. I never browse on Windows' Firefox. It's just open because VisualStudio opens a browser while I'm debugging. At most, the only other programs running on the vm are File Manager and Notepad.

If I close the vm, Stacer shows my memory usage at 11 Gig. That means the vm should be using close to 6ish gig when it is fired up (according to Stacer).

Note: Yeah, I'm not able to check Stacer after it hangs up. I do spot checks with it from time to time. Like I said, about 50% of the ram is being used when my vm is fired up. No matter what I'm doing, I've never seen more than that used.

Thanks,

If banks were really serious about security, more of them would offer yubikey support. None of mine do, unless they just brought it online.

So, I had a version of Win10 that apparently didn't have .Net 3.5 Framework on it. It took an act of congress to get it to install. I eventually found a version of 4.x that included 3.5 in it. This installed.

I don't understand how I could have that much trouble with one of Microsoft's flagship products. Also, I could dig up programs I used on Windows 3.1 that would probably still run today. I get that things get old, but .Net 3.5 is not that old, at least compared to something that would run on Windows 3.1.

It bugs me that they think everyone can just move everything to the next .Net version every time one rolls out.

Man, it wasn't that long ago that I worked at a place that still has a classic ASP web page running.

Ugh. It took me a couple of weeks to everything I needed working on this pc. If I have to reboot every week or two, not that big a deal.

I did try and restart my desktop, but it failed. I don't think I did it right. I found some instructions specific to Cinnamon. I will try them next time.

I still think it possibly has something to do with either video or memory. It isn't every single time, but no small number of times it freezes, I am doing something on youtube, and then open a new tab in either Firefox or Chromium. It's like moving that video to the background or opening that new tab went over a limit with memory. I was sure it was videos, but then I have done it a few times with no videos going. For sure, it always involves a browser, but that's because I work on web pages all day long and that's what I'm always using. Still, it's never done it when I'm in any other program.

Just moved to Linux and wanted to test an api. Opened Software Manager and installed Resonance. It looks like there are Mac and Windows versions. It was simple and clean, and did what I needed to get done. I have to admit, when I clicked to install, I was wondering what kind of hoops I was fixing to run into to use it. None. There were no hoops.

 

Moved to Mint months back. I had to install Win10 in a kvm for a couple of things impossible on Linux. I allocated 16 gig of ram to the kvm. I can't really find anything on how that works, exactly. According to Stacer, I have a consistent 16 gig of ram being used, but that's between a running Win10 kvm and all of my other running Linux programs. I've never seen my system memory use move higher or lower than 16 gig of ram when the vm is running. Again, that's the kvm + normal Linux programs.

If I allocated 16 gig of ram to the kvm, shouldn't my memory usage be over 16 gig or ram with other Linux programs running?


About once a week, maybe two weeks, I open a new tab on a browser and it hangs my system. Nothing works but the mouse pointer.

I initially thought of a memory leak with Firefox, but it will also do it opening a new tab in Chrome.

The last time it hung up, I think I noticed the virtual machine manager icon was missing from the menu bar. I'm waiting for it to hang up again to verify this.

Anyone have any thoughts on this?

view more: next ›