Is that just a model, or is there actually a display in the middle that does something?
Fps usually stands for frames per second in this context
I just use Auxio on Android or GNOME Music on Linux to listen to my downloaded files, and sync them via Syncthing.
I use Krita for raster, but Inkscape is the best for vector
I tried what I said, reinstalling to see if it still had internet. It did not. Therefore I went into a rabbithole of trying to rule out specific things of why it was working then but not now, and I still have no idea why it was working then, but I have plugged the Ethernet powerline into a new, more inconvenient, plug socket, and the wired internet is mostly working! I can still access most sites, but Firefox won’t connect to addons.mozilla.com or accounts.firefox.com. Idk if that’s a Firefox issues or a network issue, but it’s mostly working now, which is great!
Fairphone 5 isn’t old. It’s a fairly recent, midrange phone
Linux phones do exist, I was saying that you could use Waydroid on those devices (although you can also use it on Linux Desktop), such as postmarketOS on eg a Fairphone 5.
You can already, Waydroid exists
This is only on work issued devices or for work purposes. This doesn’t affect personal devices.
Hmm. One way to check multiple options at once is to try the install again and see it internet is still present when installing the OS, as it was before. If it is, that would rule out a hardware issue.
Why is that? I applied the change, and restarted the Ethernet connection, but I still don’t have internet
Here are the network settings
I tried changing the IP in manual settings, I’m not sure how I ping an IP, I assume it’s a command that I don’t know, but as the screenshots show, accessing a website didn’t work. I saw an IP in the startup menu and tried that but it didn’t seem to work
Did you want a specific part of network settings, or is this helpful?
Hill Climb Racing did that for me. I tried doing what you did the first time, then it kept sending me that every two days, so I just used Rethink DNS with the block trackers and ads blocklist.
I didn’t set it up; another member of my household did
How do I find that? Is it written on the router somewhere, or is there a command to run to find it?
It’s not doing what it was before now, now it’s just showing the ‘activation of network connection failed’ error. But before when I ran the up command it had the connected sign, and said it was connected in the GUI, but when I tried accessing any website it wasn’t able to, and I don’t have any firewall installed, so I assumed that the connection wasn’t working.
The result for ip address show ens6f1 is now the same as before
12: ens6f1: <BROADCAST, MULTICAST, UP, LOWER_UP> mtu 1500 qdisc mq state UP group default qlen 1000
link/ether 14:02:ec:7d:52:f1 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
altname enp129s0f1
inet6 fe80::1602::ecff::fe7d::52f1/64 scope link noprefixroute
valid_lft forever preferred_lft forever
62.49.7.152 is my public IP, if that’s what you mean. How do I use that information, other than allowing others to know my approximate location?
The Linux app SpeechNote has a bunch of links to models of both varieties, in various languages, and supports training on a specific voice.