I don’t use Dolphin or KDE, but based on this:
It sounds like it might be adding your credentials to KDE’s KWalletManager, and that’s what’s letting it use the credentials again. You might open that up and try deleting said credentials.
Off-and-on trying out an account over at @[email protected] due to scraping bots bogging down lemmy.today to the point of near-unusability.
I don’t use Dolphin or KDE, but based on this:
It sounds like it might be adding your credentials to KDE’s KWalletManager, and that’s what’s letting it use the credentials again. You might open that up and try deleting said credentials.


https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/607519/why-represent-percent-with-pc-rather-than#607950
It sounds like it’s mostly The Telegraph’s style guide that specifies it.
From my /etc/resolv.conf on Debian trixie, which isn’t using openresolv:
# Third party programs should typically not access this file directly, but only
# through the symlink at /etc/resolv.conf. To manage man:resolv.conf(5) in a
# different way, replace this symlink by a static file or a different symlink.
I mean, if you want to just write a static resolv.conf, I don’t think that you normally need to have it flagged immutable. You just put the text file you want in place of the symlink.
Also, when you talk about fsck, what could be good options for this to check the drive?
I’ve never used proxmox, so I can’t advise how to do so via the UI it provides. As a general Linux approach, though, if you’re copying from a source Linux filesystem, it should be possible to unmount it — or boot from a live boot Linux CD, if that filesystem is required to run the system — and then just run fsck /dev/sda1 or whatever the filesystem device is.


Ah, gotcha, not relying on USB for power, then. That’ll also work!
I’d suspect that too. Try just reading from the source drive or just writing to the destination drive and see which causes the problems. Could also be a corrupt filesystem; probably not a bad idea to try to fsck it.
IME, on a failing disk, you can get I/O blocking as the system retries, but it usually won’t freeze the system unless your swap partition/file is on that drive. Then, as soon as the kernel goes to pull something from swap on the failing drive, everything blocks. If you have a way to view the kernel log (e.g. you’re looking at a Linux console or have serial access or something else that keeps working), you’ll probably see kernel log messages. Might try swapoff -a before doing the rsync to disable swap.
At first I was under suspicion was temperature.
I’ve never had it happen, but it is possible for heat to cause issues for hard drives; I’m assuming that OP is checking CPU temperature. If you’ve ever copied the contents of a full disk, the case will tend to get pretty toasty. I don’t know if the firmware will slow down operation to keep temperature sane — all the rotational drives I’ve used in the past have had temperature sensors, so I’d think that it would. Could try aiming a fan at the things. I doubt that that’s it, though.


My only complaint is that the volume knob does not work.
I’d guess, without looking, that instead of controlling hardware in the interface, it probably intends to talk to the PC. It may do this by presenting itself as an attached USB keyboard and simulating media key presses.
If this is Linux, you’re likely seeing XF86AudioLowerVolume and XF86AudioRaiseVolume keysyms sent. You can run xev (this works on Wayland as well, but be sure to have your mouse cursor over the xev window) and turn the knob to check.
This would be consistent with it doing that:
https://old.reddit.com/r/SoundBlasterOfficial/comments/ox2xhs/sound_blaster_x4_volume_issue/
Firstly, the volume knob control directly adjust the PC master volume, it is a great feature as external volume button however the volume changes is so drastic that even a 2% up in master volume can be uncomfortably loud.
If this is Linux, you can probably set up software to have those keysyms do whatever you want when pressed, but under Wayland, it’ll depend on the compositor you’re using. I use sway, which doesn’t appear to have them do anything out of box, but you could set it up to fiddle the volume on your currently active sound output or whatever.


Note that just because a sound interface is on USB is not a hard guarantee that you aren’t going to get noise from the power supply leaking into the audio, if it’s getting power from the USB port. USB power can be remarkably dirty. I owned one USB audio interface that also let very audible noise into the output, as well as other (more expensive) interfaces that don’t. Or at least that I could hear; I didn’t try running measuring hardware against it. Very much possible to have power supply circuitry inside the USB audio interface clean that up, but it costs more money, so…
I wish that there was someone that intentionally induced noise on the USB power lines and tested USB audio interfaces to see how much leaks through into their output, but I haven’t seen anyone out there doing that.
Worst case, it is possible to get a powered USB hub and just plug a single USB DAC into it, at least.


The motherboard has functioning built-in surround sound. And yet they sold my father a goddamn Soundblaster.
The SoundBlaster card may have a better signal-to-noise ratio than whatever on-motherboard sound is present, even if the motherboard has sound hardware with a lot of outputs.
…speaking as someone who has used sound hardware with annoying noise that could be induced when the CPU was under load.


GPU prices are coming to earth
https://lemmy.today/post/42588975
Nvidia reportedly no longer supplying VRAM to its GPU board partners in response to memory crunch — rumor claims vendors will only get the die, forced to source memory on their own
If that’s true, I doubt that they’re going to be coming to earth for long.


Prices rarely, if ever, go down in a meaningful degree.
Prices on memory have virtually always gone down, and at a rapid pace.
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/historical-cost-of-computer-memory-and-storage



The local pol said he usually goes by Adolf Uunona in daily life and argued it’s too late to formally change his name.
“It’s in all official documents. It’s too late for that,” he told German newspaper Bild in 2020.
For context for folks in the US, the US makes it pretty easy to change your name. Ditto for a number of other countries that derive from the British legal tradition. A number of countries have considerably more restrictive law on this point.


If consumers aren’t going to or are much less likely to upgrade, then that affects demand from them, and one would expect manufacturers to follow what consumers demand.


I remember when it wasn’t uncommon to buy a prebuilt system and then immediately upgrade its memory with third party DIMMs to avoid paying the PC manufacturer’s premium on memory. Seeing that price relationship becoming inverted is a little bonkers. Though IIRC Framework’s memory-on-prebuilt-systems didn’t have much of a premium.
I also wonder if it will push the market further towards systems with soldered memory or on-core memory.


You can have applications where wall clock tine time is not all that critical but large model size is valuable, or where a model is very sparse, so does little computation relative to the size of the model, but for the major applications, like today’s generative AI chatbots, I think that that’s correct.


Last I looked, a few days ago on Google Shopping, you could still find some retailers that had stock of DDR5 (I was looking at 2x16GB, and you may want more than that) and hadn’t jacked their prices up, but if you’re going to buy, I would not wait longer, because if they haven’t been cleaned out by now, I expect that they will be soon.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taurus_KEPD_350
Germany apparently has 600 Taurus air-launched cruise missiles.
They apparently have a next-gen longer-range variant coming out in 2029, and are ordering 600 of those.
If I had to make a guess, the second batch — exactly the same size — presumably is to replace the first, which means that they’re presumably not gonna need (all?) the first batch in four years.
Ukraine apparently also requested some.
In May 2023, the German Federal Ministry of Defence said that Ukraine had requested the missile during the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine.[16] In interviews in June and July 2023, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius said that Germany would not supply Ukraine with long-range missiles.[17][18][19] In January 2024, the German Bundestag voted against the supply of the Taurus missile to Ukraine.[20] In February 2024, the German Bundestag and Chancellor Olaf Scholz again expressly refused Ukraine’s request while agreeing to deliver longer range weapons.[21][22] In May 2025 newly elected chancellor Friedrich Merz made more ambiguous statements regarding Taurus, that their delivery to Ukraine was within the ‘realm of possibility’ and that the discussion about their delivery to Ukraine would not be public.[23][24]


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romani_people_in_Slovenia
According to the 2002 census, there were 3,246 Romani individuals living in Slovenia.[1] They constitute 0.5 percent of the total population.[2] The Slovenia Roma speak Balkan Romani and Italian.[3] The Roma have been living in Slovenia since the 15th century.[4]
So did they just now become a threat, or was it for the past six centuries too?
@[email protected]
It could be a backronym, where the meaning of something is changed after the name is selected to fit the name. I mean, the company is Chinese. I doubt that they initially chose an English-based name, but they sure could have adopted it later.
searches
And yes, at least according to Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BYD_Company
EDIT: Ah, @[email protected] already pointed this out.