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SierraKomodo

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About SierraKomodo

  • Birthday Nov 23, 1991

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • Location
    WA, United States
  • Interests
    Programming, worldbuilding, gaming
  • Occupation
    Freelance Programmer

System

  • CPU
    AMD Ryzen 5 2600X
  • Motherboard
    ASRock B450 Pro4 ATX AM4
  • RAM
    Corsair Vengeance LPX 16 GB (2 x 8 GB) DDR4-2400 CL14
  • GPU
    EVGA GTX 970 3.5GB
  • Case
    Cooler Master Storm Trooper
  • Storage
    1 TB Samsung 860 EVO; 1 TB Western Digital Caviar Black
  • PSU
    SeaSonic G 550 W 80+ Gold
  • Display(s)
    ASUS VG278HE (1080p, 144Hz); 2x Samsung U28D590D (4k, 60hz)
  • Cooling
    Air cooled. Stock CPU cooler.
  • Keyboard
    Generic Dell keyboard.
  • Mouse
    Logitech G502 Hero
  • Sound
    Onboard audio with a pair of USB speakers and Corsair HS60 7.1 channel headset
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Pro
  • Phone
    LG V20
  • PCPartPicker URL

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SierraKomodo's Achievements

  1. To add on to the above questions, what hardware do you have, what operating system? If you open task manager and go to the 'Performance' tab, do any of the graphs look like they're above 80% usage when the microstutters are happening?
  2. For the lazy, here is a link to an article detailing the v4 release on the game's website.
  3. .. Have I been doing things wrong by using a papertowel and glass cleaner for my monitors? I haven't noticed any scratches or issues and it seems to get the job done just fine. But then I also buy decent quality paper towels and glass cleaner.
  4. I'd have to agree with the people recommending pycharm. I'm using it myself while learning python, and also use phpstorm (Made by the same people that made pycharm) for my current job.
  5. If you're wanting to go the wiki route (Like what Wikipedia is built on), you could try Mediawiki and go through some of the extensions they have. These two extensions for Mediawiki might be helpful based on what you've provided in your first post: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:MobileFrontend https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Extension:Maps You will need a server that meets these requirements to run mediawiki, though: https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Manual:Installation_requirements
  6. To quote something that's always said over on /r/buildapc - There's always going to be something around the corner to wait for. The current hardware should last you just fine for the 3-4 years, considering it just recently came out - My 590 was relevant all the way up to 2015, for example, and now I have a 970 that's still rocking it in my gaming desktop.
  7. I think I've got it then, thanks. As a side note, I'm trying to think of a possible use case for a broadcast address and I'm not coming up with anything; Are there any situations where these are actually used?
  8. So, looking at gateways. This would mean that all traffic leaving that subnet (I.e., going from 192.168.0.2 to some address across the pond) routes to the gateway address (Which I'm assuming is physically the router itself), and then passed on from there?
  9. This does seem to be the most likely scenario. I legitimately can't see Nvidia locking a desktop 1070ti chip like that.
  10. @JoeyDM On the topic of subnetting (Your posts are quite helpful by the way), you've mentioned gateway addresses and broadcast addresses but didn't really explain what those are. I've gone and googled the two terms, but I'm still having a bit of trouble understanding them. I believe the basics of it is a broadcast address forwards any packets sent to it to all addresses in the subnet, but I'm not certain on the gateway address.
  11. I had to dust some of this off... I've got a network card, a GT 440, GT 430, GTX 590, a playstation 2, a CRT monitor, and the gutted remains of an old desktop sitting upstairs. Imgur links because the total size of these images exceeded 20 MB
  12. Thought I'd replied to this and tagged it and such. Apparently not. As it turned out, I'd forgotten to set firefox's proxy settings to ignore the aurorawi.hyperv.lan domain. It was already set to ignore the 10.0.0.1/24 subnet, which is why connecting via IP worked, but using the domain name wasnt (It was trying to access 10.0.0.65 as the server I was using as a VPN saw it, not on my local network).
  13. Note: 'Just reinstall it' is preferably last resort. This particular test environment takes a bit of work to get set up, and I'd rather have an idea on how to correct it if something like this happens again in the future as well. An Ubuntu Server 16.04 virtual machine running on hyper-v is giving 'connection reset' errors when access by the domain `aurorawi.hyperv.lan` (Defined to point to 10.0.0.65 in my hosts file, verified to be working properly by pinging the domain in command prompt, also SSH connections to that domain work fine), but serves a webpage if accessed using the ip `10.0.0.65`. This was working about 3 days ago, the only changes since then being an `apt update; apt upgrade` command being run yesterday afternoon. No logs are posted in `/var/log/apache2/` relating to the failed connection attempts, and I've double checked the virtual host definitions. I've also compared this to other VMs that aren't having this issue, and I'm not seeing any obvious differences in configuration settings between the two. Host machine is running Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit with an i7 4790S VM is running Ubuntu Server 16.04 64-bit, with 2 GB RAM and 2 virtual processors. Webserver suite is the software installed with the `apt install lamp-server^` command, with the exception of php5.6 and relevant modules being installed via the ondrej repository. IPTables has no specific entries, and everything is set to a policy of accept sierra@aurorawi:~$ sudo iptables -L Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination Here's the vhost configuration: <VirtualHost *:80> # The ServerName directive sets the request scheme, hostname and port that # the server uses to identify itself. This is used when creating # redirection URLs. In the context of virtual hosts, the ServerName # specifies what hostname must appear in the request's Host: header to # match this virtual host. For the default virtual host (this file) this # value is not decisive as it is used as a last resort host regardless. # However, you must set it for any further virtual host explicitly. #ServerName www.example.com ServerAdmin webmaster@localhost DocumentRoot /var/www/html <Directory /var/www/html> AllowOverride All </Directory> # Available loglevels: trace8, ..., trace1, debug, info, notice, warn, # error, crit, alert, emerg. # It is also possible to configure the loglevel for particular # modules, e.g. #LogLevel info ssl:warn ErrorLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/error.log CustomLog ${APACHE_LOG_DIR}/access.log combined # For most configuration files from conf-available/, which are # enabled or disabled at a global level, it is possible to # include a line for only one particular virtual host. For example the # following line enables the CGI configuration for this host only # after it has been globally disabled with "a2disconf". #Include conf-available/serve-cgi-bin.conf </VirtualHost> # vim: syntax=apache ts=4 sw=4 sts=4 sr noet
  14. Depending on the version of Windows 10 (Education, Enterprise, and Professional have this feature), you can forego the third party software and just use the built in hyper-v system. Here's a guide on enabling Hyper-v - Note that the bottom of the page has a link to a guide on setting up a VM: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/virtualization/hyper-v-on-windows/quick-start/enable-hyper-v I use it myself for my test VMs (Primarily mine run linux), and haven't had any problems with it so far.
  15. Do games count? Got ahold of Stellaris through humble monthly and I've been playing almost non-stop.
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