You could also try a turbo ratio offset instead of an all core.went up to 1.38v now middle LLC...not wheas. But all-core load droops to 1.31v now which is still quite high. Thermally not able to handle even with a 360. Maybe I should abandon my existing quad core turbo.
I notice I get instability in some games that are clearly console ports, they will ping me to 5.3ghz sometimes, which i've set to 4 active cores. I don't need nearly this much voltage for stable 5.1 all-core.
Who the fuck knows.What is it?
I'm just gonna pump up voltage and ride it until I upgrade in a few months.You could also try a turbo ratio offset instead of an all core.
Again, the 11 series is kind of a different beast IME.
Only non-Cherry switches I've used are Kailh Box Whites and NovelKey Sherbets.
I like the sound profile on the oil kings better overall.Oil kings. I still prefer lubed and filmed Black Ink v2s though. They are the goat.
My dr wanted me on a insulin thing called Saxenda but my insurance said hell naw.I don't take anything for the beetus yet, but there's a new drug that's supposed to help with weight loss too. Forget the name. But I want it lol
❯ brew leaves | xargs -n1 brew desc
azure-cli: Microsoft Azure CLI 2.0
[email protected]: Azure Functions Core Tools 3.0
bandwhich: Terminal bandwidth utilization tool
cask: Emacs dependency management
dnsperf: Measure DNS performance by simulating network conditions
dnsx: DNS query and resolution tool
doctl: Command-line tool for DigitalOcean
exercism: Command-line tool to interact with exercism.io
[email protected]: Play, record, convert, and stream audio and video
gh: GitHub command-line tool
gnupg: GNU Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) package
gnuradio: SDK for signal processing blocks to implement software radios
graphviz: Graph visualization software from AT&T and Bell Labs
crip: Extract server certificates. - CLI
helm: Kubernetes package manager
hping: Command-line oriented TCP/IP packet assembler/analyzer
htop: Improved top (interactive process viewer)
httpd: Apache HTTP server
httpx: Fast and multi-purpose HTTP toolkit
imagemagick: Tools and libraries to manipulate images in many formats
jq: Lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor
libmaxminddb: C library for the MaxMind DB file format
libmetalink: C library to parse Metalink XML files
libsmi: Library to Access SMI MIB Information
libssh: C library SSHv1/SSHv2 client and server protocols
libuv: Multi-platform support library with a focus on asynchronous I/O
lua: Powerful, lightweight programming language
maven: Java-based project management
azdata-cli: Microsoft Azdata CLI
minikube: Run a Kubernetes cluster locally
mitmproxy: Intercept, modify, replay, save HTTP/S traffic
naabu: Fast port scanner
Warning: Treating namebench as a formula. For the cask, use homebrew/cask/namebench
namebench: DNS benchmark utility
netcat: Utility for managing network connections
nghttp2: HTTP/2 C Library
nuclei: HTTP/DNS scanner configurable via YAML templates
nvm: Manage multiple Node.js versions
phive: Phar Installation and Verification Environment (PHIVE)
pyenv: Python version management
qwt: Qt Widgets for Technical Applications
scrcpy: Display and control your Android device
speedtest-cli: Command-line interface for https://speedtest.net bandwidth tests
ssh-audit: SSH server & client auditing
ssldump: SSLv3/TLS network protocol analyzer
sslscan: Test SSL/TLS enabled services to discover supported cipher suites
sslsplit: Man-in-the-middle attacks against SSL encrypted network connections
sslyze: SSL scanner
stripe: Stripe CLI utility
subfinder: Subdomain discovery tool
telnet: User interface to the TELNET protocol
testssl: Tool which checks for the support of TLS/SSL ciphers and flaws
wget: Internet file retriever
youtube-dl: Download YouTube videos from the command-line
I'm currently in the market for a thin and small bluetooth mouse for my laptop but with a scroll will and side forward/back buttons. I can find thin but not thin with dedicated back/forward buttons.Lightweight mice are the reason kids are WEAK now.
And here comes the 100% portless iPhone!
do they mostly use the scroll wheel for back/forward now?I'm currently in the market for a thin and small bluetooth mouse for my laptop but with a scroll will and side forward/back buttons. I can find thin but not thin with dedicated back/forward buttons.
Never heard of such a thing.do they mostly use the scroll wheel for back/forward now?
you might have to use setpoint to change it, but my old logitech MMO mouse used the scroll wheel left/right as the back forth function:Never heard of such a thing.
Oh, duh. Yeah, I know what you are talking about now. I haven't used a mouth that you could press the center scroll wheel left or right to do anything in a long time. I've got to go back through my amazon searches and see if any of those thin mouses with scroll wheels have that feature.you might have to use setpoint to change it, but my old logitech MMO mouse used the scroll wheel left/right as the back forth function:
MX Master 3I'm currently in the market for a thin and small bluetooth mouse for my laptop but with a scroll will and side forward/back buttons. I can find thin but not thin with dedicated back/forward buttons.
I have an MX Master 3 I'm using right at this momement and the center scroll wheel does nothing when pressing left or right. It makes a little click when pressed to the right but that's just a quirk and has no option to perform any action.MX Master 3
Use the thumb side wheel to scroll right/left.I have an MX Master 3 I'm using right at this momement and the center scroll wheel does nothing when pressing left or right. It makes a little click when pressed to the right but that's just a quirk and has no option to perform any action.