Heya, been using Discord for a while now and just ran into my first issue. All audio gets slowed down when I enter a call, and it's only through my headphones. Everything is fine if I run it through my speakers. This started on the 5th of June, I had just purchased Ark and was going to play it with a friend, and it sounded like I was talking to someone else. At first I thought it was Ark doing it but it continued even after closing the game and then I noticed it was Discord doing it. I tried recording it and sending it to my friend to let him hear it, but it's all fine on his end, which means I can't really post a link showing what it sounds like either.

I have noticed a rare but very annoying issue with phone call audio quality on my iPhone 7plus. It is like the voice from the other caller is suddenly put through digital molasses and slowed down and distorted. Then it resumes normally after 1-3 seconds. It is not with any particular other caller, and I believe it has happened with and without WiFi calling enabled on my end. I am on T-mobile in CA. Has anyone else had this occur? Any ideas?


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I have been estimating the impact of the recently announced Intel bug on my packet processing application using netmap. So far, I have measured that I process about 50 packets per each poll() system call made, but this figure doesn't include gettimeofday() calls. I have also measured that I can read from a non-existing file descriptor (which is about the cheapest thing that a system call can do) 16.5 million times per second. My packet processing rate is 1.76 million packets per second, or in terms of system calls, 0.0352 million system calls per second. This means performance reduction would be 0.0352 / 16.5 = 0.21333% if system call penalty doubles, hardly something I should worry about.

However, my application may use gettimeofday() system calls quite often. My understanding is that these are not true system calls, but rather implemented as virtual system calls, as described in What are vdso and vsyscall?.

Now, my question is, does the fix to the recently announced Intel bug (that may affect ARM as well and that probably won't affect AMD) slow down gettimeofday() system calls? Or is gettimeofday() an entirely different animal due to being implemented as a different kind of virtual system call?

On most architectures, gettimeofday() is implemented as a purely userspace call, and never enters the kernel, doesn't include the TLB flush or CR3 switch that KPTI implies, so you shouldn't see a performance impact.

Exceptions include unusual kernel or hardware configurations that don't use the vDSO mechanisms, e.g., if you don't have a constant rdtsc or if you have explicitly disabled rdtsc timekeeping via a boot parameter. You'd probably already know if that was the case since it means that gettimeofday would take 100-200ns rather than 15-20ns since it's already making a kernel call.

Good question, the VDSO pages are kernel memory mapped into user space. If you single-step into gettimeofday(), you see a call into the VDSO page where some code there uses rdtsc and scales the result with scale factors it reads from another data page.

$uicideboy$ - MISSED MY CUE FOR CURTAIN CALL$uicideboy$ - MISSED MY CUE FOR CURTAIN CALL (slowed+bass boosted)I No Longer Fear The Razor Guarding My Heel (IV)$UICIDEBOY$ - I WANT TO DIE IN NEW ORLEANS

However, neither setURL or reload calls let me force the webview back to urlxxx from urlyyy. I tried call either one of them and both of them with and without a long wait (5sec) in between. The webview stays at urlyyy.

Julia Gerwe, left, embraces her call to serve with Srs. Susan Gatz, center, and Rosemarie Kirwan, at a November 2021 food distribution site in Nelson County, Kentucky, home of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. (Courtesy of Danielle Hagler)

I have been pondering my own call to serve as I reflect on my blessings received through service alongside the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth, Kentucky, and as I discern the next steps in my journey. 'Tis nearly the season for decisions to be made as to where I'll be after this service year. I sure feel the pressure mounting!

I was reminded of my own call to serve during this conference and, further, how saying yes each day to living this life of intentional service has changed throughout my year and a half with the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth. (Shout-out to my program's Second Year Learning Community for encouraging these reflections, as well.)

Often, young people in the United States are inundated with a single, linear trajectory of success: graduate high school, attend college, get a well-paying job, and work your way up the corporate ladder. Perhaps volunteer at a food pantry or your church on the weekends or during the summer. But a lifestyle rooted in simplicity and service? It's radically antithetical, really.

Perhaps this linear trajectory is being disrupted; after all, the widely debated "Great Resignation" is making obvious the reality that wage-stagnant, 9-to-5 work is neither sustainable nor desirable for young and old alike. At least, I hope this "Great Resignation" continues to call this cultural norm and reality into question.

What drives me to step out of this mold and to instead serve my community in this dedicated amount of time is nothing short of a call, a vocation, or an ability to "see life as whole" and interconnected.

Upon this endless questioning, though, I found myself returning to the still-small flame burning within, calling me to service. In this time of distress, insecurity and restlessness, I turned to a brand-new service program in an unknown small town doing work I certainly wasn't qualified to do. We surely took a chance on each other!

My call was laughably simple: to slow down and step out of the rat race of life to live intentionally and with purpose. I packed my bags, moved onto the property of a Catholic convent with sisters I didn't know, and set off to find my answers. What I've gotten in return has been so much greater.

After a year and a half of living and serving at Nazareth, I still hear sisters say, "We're so lucky to have you here, Julia," as I call bingo numbers, share tea and enjoy coffee with them. (Isn't it the most beautiful ministry?) My response is always the same: "To be honest, I'm even more lucky to be here." And I mean it.

My day-to-day within these years of service has been flexible and fluid. I am grateful for the space this has created for me to dig into sustainability topics that interest me, build partnerships within my community and get to know the sisters. This gratitude often reflects the call I feel to continue serving my community here and now. A desire to intentionally share the sorrows and joys of this community fueled my commitment here and now motivates me to stay.

For me, this alternative life of service is a combination of hundreds of yeses each day. In answering this call to serve, another applicable question becomes clearer: Does who I am reflect how I see and engage with the world today?

Washington, DC - United States Senators Elizabeth Warren (D- Mass.), Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) asked the Health and Human Services (HHS) Inspector General (IG) to conduct a full review of all funding streams, programs, and other congressional mandates related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) diagnostic testing to determine whether any programs have been "slowed down" at the request of President Donald Trump or HHS political employees.

Over 2.2 million Americans have contracted COVID-19, and over 120,000 Americans have died. Cases are rising in at least 23 states, including Florida, Texas, Arizona, and Oklahoma. Diagnostic testing is a critical tool to help public health officials and local leaders identify new COVID-19 cases and track the spread of the virus, but it appears that President Trump does not support federal efforts to expand access to COVID-19 tests and has undermined efforts to increase testing. The HHS IG must conduct a thorough review to ensure no program was unduly slowed based on requests from the President or other political employees in the Department.

The new system will allow Antioch police dispatchers to easily transfer calls occurring in nearby Brentwood or in the jurisdiction of the East Bay Regional Parks Police Department to their dispatch centers since they use the same system, according to the report. Others in the area that use the same software include Pleasant Hill, Martinez, San Pablo, Pinole, Hercules, Alameda and Emeryville.

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Prolonged apnea with no heart activity in a person who is not responsive is called cardiac (or cardiopulmonary) arrest. In infants and children, the most common cause of cardiac arrest is respiratory arrest. In adults, the opposite usually occurs, cardiac arrest most often leads to respiratory arrest.

For example, Spectrum internet speeds are advertised as up to 300Mbps, 500Mbps and 940Mbps. It's implied that those speeds are download speeds, but what about your upload speeds? You'll have to dig a bit deeper -- like checking the fine print or calling customer service -- to discover that the upload speeds for those plans are 10Mbps, 20Mbps and 35Mbps, respectively.

Zoom, for example, can require upload speeds of 3Mbps or higher for a clear, reliable connection. If you've got multiple video calls going on at once, all over Wi-Fi, your upload speeds may not be able to keep up with the demand.

Along with strategically scheduling meeting times to accommodate everyone in your household, ensure your router is set to broadcast 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands. There's likely to be less clutter on your 5GHz band, allowing for better connection quality and faster upload speeds. e24fc04721

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