I think they're referring to the common trope:
rustyredox
Are the two Linux devices on the same IP subnet?
Are any of the other KDE connect features working?
"Hey! Why don't you pick on someone your own size?" *proceeds to pics on someone his own size
For a second there I thought you were advocating for fluorescent green or monochromatic CRT screens of old.
That's a neat AI artifact of associative or transitive probabilities. Typewriters -> keyboards -> split keyboards -> split typewriters? I'd like to see some modern PC manufacture decorum through a steampunk filter.
I'm surprised I couldn't yet find a dummy HDMI plug to spoof a 4K@120Hz capable display. All the ones I've found thus far only support 120Hz at 1080p, and never any HDR support at all. I have an OLED android device with 2K screen and matching refresh rate, but the without a physical monitor to stream capturing from. Emulating such display resolutions and colored depths also seems just as formidably challenging.
Aside from my PC, the newest device I own is only a snapdragon 8 gen 1 soc device, which I think sadly doesn't have a hardware AV1 decider. Definitely a consideration for later upgrades.
I would also guess the smaller range of hardware revisions is easier to keep track of when considering something as device specific as microphone frequency response curves or approximate intrinsic camera calibration values, thus simplifying the post-processing or data ingestion from an aggregate deployment of recording equipment.
While Android devices are probably significantly cheaper, they'd vary quite a bit in terms of microphone, camera, and lens manufacturers, not to mention ADCs, gain to noise ratios and cheapest firmware, depending on what the OEM felt like swapping to for that minor product revision.
Not sure how precise these researchers are trying to calibrate and rectify field measurements, but if they're using internal phone sensors rather then external AV peripherals, then homogeneity across field computers would simply matters of data uniformity.
Any recommendations for fine tuning Sunshine to match Nvidia's local Gamestream? I haven't had much luck in getting Sunshine to run as smoothly at 4K 120Hz HDR 150Mbps via LAN as Nvidia's deprecated streaming server software, so have to slow to migrate over.
I wonder how health insurance providers would then find ways of carving out new coverage exemptions for treatment to upper lips.
For the uninitiated:
https://youtu.be/3m5qxZm_JqM