I’m not any more knowledgeable about this stuff than you :(, I just got an AX210 for my laptop the other day, but I don’t have a 6 GHz capable router.
It feels like it’s some kind of power saving feature or something like that. Do you actually get any faster speeds on 6 GHz?
You could try seeing if you have some kind of “roaming” or “mesh” option in your router settings. There’s a feature that’s supposed to have the router kick devices off of a connection if it thinks there’s a better one in the same mesh network. Not sure if it has any applicability to different frequencies on the same access point. Probably a dead end but you could look into it.
If it’s a fully featured router there should be tons of random options to change the power usage of the router’s wifi radios and all sorts of other stuff like that. At least on my old Asus router there were tons of options like that.
If you can set them up with the same SSID that would be better.
Wi-Fi has all sorts of variables at play.
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I guess if you’re just running it in a VM with a passthrough storage device with nothing else running in the VM that could be okay.
That’s part of the Dash to Dock extension I think. Go to the Dash to Dock settings in the Extensions app. There should be settings in one of the tabs for notification icons/badges or something similar.
On Debian I think it would actually be sudo apt-get install python3-libevdev
, the thing is called evdev, not ev.
a hit dog will holler.
does emacs have an integrated terminal view inside it? Seems like maybe it’s just creating a shell for you to use inside the editor or something? Either way, “bash --login” is just a login shell which I think basically just acts like if you had just logged in instead of inheriting most stuff from whatever process launched it. It in’t “logging in” like some user account or something. Unlikely that it’s something nefarious. At worst, it’s just usual buggy linux software interacting in weird ways.
Are you using some kind of IDE application? Or just standard GUI apps?
rip bozo
Looking in https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/init/main.c?h=v6.5-rc5 there’s a function setup_command_line that seems to set up the built-in command line which is called after setup_boot_config
ok idk what that all was. Here’s something more interesting:
In arch/x86/kernel/setup.c
it says /* append boot loader cmdline to builtin */
. I think that suggests that the builtin comes first. And I assume that the code that queries the command line scans left to
right and selects the first instance of an option because there doesn’t seem to be anywhere that “loads” args into some kind of structure.
#ifdef CONFIG_CMDLINE_BOOL
#ifdef CONFIG_CMDLINE_OVERRIDE
strscpy(boot_command_line, builtin_cmdline, COMMAND_LINE_SIZE);
#else
if (builtin_cmdline[0]) {
/* append boot loader cmdline to builtin */
strlcat(builtin_cmdline, " ", COMMAND_LINE_SIZE);
strlcat(builtin_cmdline, boot_command_line, COMMAND_LINE_SIZE);
strscpy(boot_command_line, builtin_cmdline, COMMAND_LINE_SIZE);
}
#endif
#endif
I guess the best thing to do would be to run linux in QEMU with the EFI system that’s provided by a third party thing and test it out.
The S3 “sleep state” of the computer. Which I guess is sleep. There sre other numbers for running and off I think.