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Gunji_Otaku

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  • Posts

    4
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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    New Zealand
  • Interests
    Anime, Mobile Tech, Networking, Fibre optics, Gaming, VR, PS4,Switch, Escape rooms, Board games. Basically all nerdy stuff.
  • Biography
    30something male Brit currently residing in NZ. 17 years working in telecommunications, from sales, tech support, management, operations, and NOC engineer roles.
  • Occupation
    Fibre-optic Network Operations Manager

System

  • CPU
    Intel 8700K Oc'd to 5Ghz
  • Motherboard
    Asus Prime Z370-a
  • RAM
    16gb Corsair Vengeance - Black
  • GPU
    Gigabyte GTX Windforce 1080ti
  • Case
    Deepcool Genome II
  • Storage
    2x1TB Samsung Evo 860
  • PSU
    Corsair RM750x White
  • Display(s)
    2x 1080 32'' Dell monitors.
  • Cooling
    Deepcool Genome II Water cooled CPU, Air cooled GPU 2x Phanteks 140mm
  • Keyboard
    Logitech G110
  • Mouse
    Logitech G903 wireless
  • Sound
    Creative Soundblast Pro 7:1 surround
  • Operating System
    Windows 10

Gunji_Otaku's Achievements

  1. Hi Team I've been using G733 (wireless headphones) as my daily since lock-down first hit and I love them. However I was wondering if anyone knows a way to program a macro in the G-hub software, or perhaps another ap that can make a button function (say double tap/long press the mute button) to remotely pick up phone calls I get on our company softphone? We currently use software called SP350 (it's not great) to manage our phone interactions. I can take and receive calls fine at the desk by hitting the button in the software to pick up the call etc. I just wanted to know if its possible to program one of the buttons on the headset to do that remotely? The G-hub software has all kinds of macro functions and I've tried to figure it out, but not to any level of success. I assumed this wasn't an uncommon request as I'm sure I cannot be the only one looking for a function like this, but the Logitech forums seemed lacking on useful advice. So here I am turning to the tech gurus on LTT for hep =) Appreciate anyone who can assist me in this.
  2. I bet Linus didn't expect he'd be benchmarking a face mask this year... **BANEVOICE**: "Your punishment must be more RGB"
  3. Personally I've been waiting for Oneplus 7 to come out so I can finally upgrade my Oneplus 3. I never got the 5/t because of the dumb placing of the finger print reader on the back.. eww, and the 6/t has the silly notches. Sadly I've seen so many "leaks" and "previews" that seem fairly legit and they have put me off. They all show the pop up camera. =( If the silly pop-up selfie cam is legit, then I'm gonna have to find another phone. I want high specs, fast CPU, at least 6gb ram (maybe 8 max), headphone jack, fast charging, upgradable storage options and a full notch-less screen... I don't want selfie cameras (at all), or overly designed and pointless phone rears (it goes in a case so who cares what the back looks like?). Hell I don't even care a huge deal about water resistance, if its there even in small part then sweet, but the hardcore drop it under 150m of water resistance?? why?! The Vivo Dual really caught my eye getting rid of the selfie cam to use the much better normal rear camera. Something I've said we should do for years! Sadly the rest of the specs could be better, and they don't have the oxygen (hydrogen?) OS that Oneplus has that makes me like the phone so much. I saw the Pocofone F1 and LTT's root vid, and it intrigued me enough to consider it, but I've yet to find a "long term" review where someone reviews it months later, not just a week later. I want to make sure that it holds up, both durability wise, and speed wise. I hope LTT can at least confirm some more about the Oneplus 7, and I really hope Linus gets a super early preview so he can test it out for a month before it hits the shelves. NDA's be damned, just tell me if I should keep waiting or be disapointed for a silly pop up camera and buy something else...
  4. It really depends what the voltage is, what the Eth-cable is plugged into, and what the device is on the other end, and how well its made. Low end cheap devices pop easy with a slight voltage/current change, higher end ones have inbuilt safety mechanisms to prevent that. You also need to take into consideration, how much power and the thickness of the copper cable in the eth-cable. A lightning bolt of huge voltage will melt and destroy small cables, but it's super rare that a bolt would ever hit close enough to deliver that voltage/current to your device! Most devices like your local dslam/fibre cabinets etc are all safely earthed and protected to prevent something like your phone line from surging high voltage to your house/work etc. But even then things can happen that cause them to fail, and in those events your house should be earthed and fused to prevent that damage also. If the surge comes from your router or switch in the first place (unsure why it would) then yes they could cause this. We've seen dodgy old fibre ONT's been fried because customers have them plugged into the mains power of the house and no surge protector devices installed. In most cases the Gateway device (router/switch) connected to the ONT however does not take any damage. But its not unheard of to fry the ports on the device, just not the entire device.
  5. In his "Why does LTT have so many staff??" Video Linus mentioned Ivan is no longer with LTT. Sad Panda ʕ ꈍᴥꈍʔ
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