Anybody know anything about setting up really basic Selenium tests to run in Travis CI? I have students submitting some very basic typescript projects where they essentially uses textboxes, buttons, and divs to send input and output back and forth, and I want to automatically check if they've satisfied requirements on GitHub. I'm pretty sure I know how to set up the Selenium tests locally, but am having trouble figuring out if I can do it on Travis (I have an educational plan so should have free access to a lot of Enterprise features).
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
Here's an article about the Ryzen 3000 series.
The new Ryzen 3000 chips mark the first "big" leap for AMD since they introduced their first Ryzen processors a bit over two years ago. Unlike last year's Ryzen 2000 series, which was a more minor refresh and brought some tweaks to the microarchitecture and process node, this year's Ryzen 3000 is a major upgrade for both CPU architecture as well as on the manufacturing node.
I went from a Ryzen 7 1700X to a Ryzen 9 3900X and I expected it to be faster, but it's been 'holy sh*t' faster. And that's just from swapping out the CPU, same motherboard, same memory, same everything.
OK, you've convinced me!
I've been working some on learning Rust. It's a pretty cool language, but there's definitely a learning curve. I'm writing a command line version of solitaire with it as a learning project.
I would love some advice on what to do with my music collection. I have 50+ GB of music in my iTunes library, much of it ripped or ahemmed from places. I have an iPod Classic which also contains all of that music, but which no longer updates from my Macbook. My Macbook has bluetooth but for some reason won't recognize the bluetooth adaptor I bought for my little stereo.
As a result, this is how I listen to my own music: plug in the iPod to the aux cable on the stereo. If I want to listen to other music, I stream Google Play Music (the free version) from my phone to the bluetooth adaptor for the stereo.
However this mechanism will only work until my iPod stops working, and there's no way for me to add music to my library in such a way that all systems can access it.
So I think I will have to go on the Cloud? So I can stream, at least to my phone? But I was looking and it looks like Amazon and Google both have pretty expensive monthly costs just to host my music ($10/month). This place has some good recommendations but I don't know, I've never heard of it. I have so much in the Google ecosystem I'd like to stay out of it if I can...
Does anyone have any advice other than "get another laptop with properly working bluetooth"?
You can upload up to 50,000 songs to Google Music for free. It is unclear whether that will last much longer though as they are trying to transition to YouTube Music.
You could also try buying a USB Bluetooth adapter for your laptop. They would be far cheaper than a new laptop. Or look into a WiFi based streamer like a Chromecast Audio - I'm not sure how well they work for local files from a laptop though. Apple no longer supports such a thing for audio only unfortunately.
I need help. My Android phone has both my Gmail accounts on it, my personal and work. Well, the work one has been deactivated, and I can't figure out how to get it off my phone. Gmail keeps trying to sign it in, Play won't let me download anything until I sign in, and the fact that my personal account is signed in doesn't matter. What do I do here?
Settings->Accounts->Click account name->Remove account
If that's not right tell me the make and model. Not all Android's are identical in the details.
Yes! Thank you!