@Walking_coffin
@lemmy.dbzer0.comYou could always try on another machine if you can to see if the latency is due to the laptop or the keyboard itself.
Also, changing keyboard, especially if you've been using a certain keyboard type and you change to another, can really mess uo the eay you type until you get used to it.
Lastly, bluetooth is a whole mess so it very well could be that. If you value what you bought and like you said, someone close to you is a tinkerer, converting a bluetooth device to a wired can be a nice project if they haven't done so before (and it prevents throwing out a working device with a small defect).
Thanks for the info, I'll keep this in mind. Also, I'm glad to hear your friend got better.
My birth was a pretty big event that changed my life drastically. I wish it never happened..
Setup:
Download Seal and go to Settings > General. From there click on the update yt-dlp to make sure you're on the latest yt-dlp build. No head to Custom command > New template. Put your label of choice and in the "Command template" section put in your custom command.
To create a good custom command I highly recommend you browse TheFrenchGhosty's Ultimate YouTube-DL Scripts Collection's Watch on Mobile Devices Script to get an idea of what you would want (I'll give an example template later on based on theirs).
Once your command is done click "Done". If you have not configured the output directory yet, go to Settings > Download directory > Custom command directory (Usually you'll want this in the Download folder. On android: /storage/emulated/0/Download/<Name-Of-Your-Choosing> Make sure to have "Configure before download" under Settings > General, enabled. From there, exit the app.
Go to the app you want to download your media from (ie. Browser, Youtube). If you are in a browser, long press the url bar of your link and click "Share". You will be presented a menu to share the selected link. Long press on the Seal icon marked as "Quick Download". You will be presented with a way to pin the app. This will allow this specific app you're in to have Seal be presented right away when you want to share a link and be prompted with the "Configure before download" menu. From there, select "Commands" as "Download type" and click on the template's label you created earlier. You can now click "Download" and enjoy.
You could avoid the hussle of setting up a custom command and tweak a few things in the app's offered options. I just prefer to use my usual commands that I use to download on my phone as well.
As for the command, here's a short template I just made from modifying TheFrenchGhosty's scripts as mentionned above (haven't tested it but should theoritically work):
yt-dlp --format "(bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=1080][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=1080]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=720][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=720]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=480][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=480]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=360][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=360]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=240][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=240]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=144][fps>30]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1][height=144]/bestvideo[vcodec^=avc1])+(bestaudio[acodec^=mp4a]/bestaudio)/best" --force-ipv4 --sleep-requests 1 --sleep-interval 5 --max-sleep-interval 30 --ignore-errors --no-continue --no-overwrites --add-metadata --parse-metadata "%(title)s:%(meta_title)s" --parse-metadata "%(uploader)s:%(meta_artist)s" --no-write-description --check-formats --concurrent-fragments 4 --output "%(title)s - %(uploader)s (%(upload_date)s).%(ext)s --merge-output-format "mkv" --throttled-rate 100K
Not all the info here is relevant for each use cases but I hope this gives ideas and helps even a bit.
I was just confused and not sure wether it was or not. Thanks to the clarifications of you and others I now know.
Something I forgot, if you are brave enough, replace the thermal paste with a good quality one. Recently I did it and since then I have seen a huge difference. Just make sure to disassemble everything so you can access the CPU and the radiator.
If you are technical enough you can use an Xposed module to prevent that. Like one that reduces the intake of energy while charging. Some ROMs also offer that built-in.
Try to see what your charger is. Maybe your phone is using "fast charging" which might make it charge faster but it will definitely get hotter. A charger that is compatible with your phone and without fast-charging capabilities might help your phone not be as hot.
Lastly, and this is less about the energy part and more about safety, make sure if you charge it unatended that it is away from anything flammable. While there is a very small change something like that would ever happen I wouldn't take the risk.