If I’m reading the part number right that regulator is rated for a current limit of 400mA At 5v that’s 2 watts.
If I’m reading the part number right that regulator is rated for a current limit of 400mA At 5v that’s 2 watts.
Ah yeah I used to get high as shit before tests to replicate the same conditions I studied in.
Or in other words, everyone else is complete shit.
The worst here are financial institutions. What do I want the most security on? My money.
I get that they have regulations, but it annoys me all the time.
My mommie always told me I was special
Damn I’m at 22. I really need to be better at taking that, I wonder if it’s why I feel tired and shitty all the time.
I honestly think it’s about the same…
But what site does he need to reset?
The FreeBSD handbook was my first introduction into the world of *nix. Still an incredible resource even if haven’t used bsd for a few years.
There is something very off-putting about drinking coffee from a stainless steel mug. I’m 100% with ceramic or bust guy.
The filter type also changes the oil content, for example paper filters absorb much more oil than metal filters
Yeah I like to try and go a little cross eyed
I think someone else mentioned this but just run vimtutor
in your command line for a pretty exhaustive tutorial.
I’m proud of you, random internet stranger!
I don’t agree. Really nice improvement imo. But I get it, change is hard.
I believe this is the specification: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8591
Oh God I didn’t even see that lol
Hey man, like we’ve got time to improve!
Writing is hard. The law is complicated. Write something up for the admins to review.
It helps ensure that levels between 2.5v and 5.5v can be fed to the controller without breaking anything. For some cheaper power supplies you might get a voltage drop when starting to pull load, this will clean that up and prevent the voltage from dropping too low for the microcontroller.
If I’m reading the correct datasheet I can see it is current limiting so it should shutdown when overdrawn.