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It should never be needed, even when replacing the battery as that data is part of the BMS.
Calibration was a thing like 25 years ago with the awful NiCD/NiMH batteries as I remember.
It should never be needed, even when replacing the battery as that data is part of the BMS.
Calibration was a thing like 25 years ago with the awful NiCD/NiMH batteries as I remember.
For important data I’d say utilize a data recovery company. IMO it’ s too risky to try doing something yourself and making it worse.
Yeah but compared to x86 setups they often are not the best choice these days.
Why do you trust Greasemonkey and some random script? That’s far less safe than just installing uBlock Origin.
IIRC if you’re running uBlock Origin there’s no need for Privacy Badger.
In a classic server-client situation, your clients should have AllowedIPs set to 0.0.0.0/0, ::/0 in their repecive configuration file.
Only if you want the VPN to be your default route! Many may not want this.
No, 2FA stops someone from getting into your account if they have the password.
I find it really hard to read for getting the information I need quickly, too much going on with too much useless info.
App and program are interchangeable terms, it doesn’t matter.
“Usually”
And stuff like this is why Linux communities get a bad rep lol. No one cares that the the term all only came along with the iPhone, it’s a common term now so get used to it.
Does it maybe mean 40% cacao content chocolate?
With vaultwarden it’s very easy, just change the port map in the docker compose file on the host side. No idea how to do it with the official server stack.
Backup and restore after formatting? I would assume you have backups in place already
You’re much more patient than I am, my method is hold the power button down until it shuts off lol
IMO backups on the same provider aren’t really backups. Good that they had some at a different one.
Nonetheless, as a Linux user, you are encouraged to build directly from source.
Yeah screw that lol, I want my OS to just work and be easy to use with minimal fuss.
I mean there’s that, but it’s a lot of work for a dev too.
I would rather Linux just be able to detect what’s missing and install it for me. In the case of a lot of missing components, what it says is missing will be named completely different from the package you need to install which makes it really hard.
It was always nice with windows installers because they would come with the needed components, or windows would just prompt to install them automatically.
I guess that’s essentially what Flatpak solves!
It’s definitely a big learning curve with how complex installing things on linux is haha, I’m still used to windows just open the exe installer and that’s it.
Sort of. The charge controller will limit charging current if too far outside normal temperature ranges. But it will still charge all the way to 100% unless you manually limit that with the settings on your device.
That’s actually incorrect, charging a Li-ion battery to 100% is significantly worse for it than charging to 80%, and keeping it at 100% plugged in is even worse. Which is why most devices will have the option to stop charging at 80% or near there instead of going all the way to 100%.
Charging while warm is also much worse than charging below 50 degrees F or so.