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Activity for elgonzoâ€
Type | On... | Excerpt | Status | Date |
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Comment | Post #282961 |
I don't know for sure, but somewhere in the OS settings (or perhaps somewhere in some Lenovo utility program) there could perhaps be an option to configure the 3.5 mm jack as either headset, line-in, microphone, line-out, headphone, whatever port. If there is no such setting to be found, try a 3.5 mm... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #282365 |
Okay, well, if the Wikipedia article says that data is units of information and that's what you are asking about, then the answer is simple: Your ISO contains units of information. Even after turning off the VM, your ISO is still fully intact, containing still all the units of information it had orig... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #282365 |
Edit your question then so that the question makes it clear what kind of data your question is concerned about :-) (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #282365 |
You need to be more specific about what kind of data you are referring to. Generally, if data is stored on some RAM disk (whether it's in the VM or on the host side), then the data is gone when the OS is shut down/restarted or the VM/host is turned off. Note that VirtualBox also has support for "immu... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #281888 |
The first sentence is wrong. A hash function can also map a smaller number to a larger number. You can prove this easily by yourself: Take a bunch of files that are 10 bytes long, which means each of these files is being equivalent to an at maximum 80 bit wide number. Now create the MD5 hash sum for ... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
Comment | Post #282309 |
No. Configuring one port over another for some service in itself does not necessitate port forwarding. There can be desires/needs relating to the overall network configuration/setup that might demand/encourage using port forwarding but the mere act of configuring a service to use a port different fro... (more) |
— | almost 3 years ago |
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