There may be some dac's that could do it but that would require a permanent dongle attached to your system. I was unable to find any other way in a quick search. Will increase cpu usage, sound will be a little laggier, and may introduce some "crackles" or "pops" into the sound occasionally. You would install a fancy sound app, pipe all your sound to it, have it do some compression or whatever, and then pipe the output back to your headphone jack. Longer answer, you can look at this thread: How the hell am I meant to normalise volume between applications? All the while, output of stupid things that don't have volume controls like Instagram (also in browser, like youtibe) are deafeningly loud. My problem is that if I have the output volume such that Spotify is at the right level when set to say 80% application volume, youtube videos have to be so incredibly low that it becomes hard to adjust them - say 5%. I don't know how to deal with comparative sound volume between applications - I think the system output volume (~45%) and the amplifier volume (~90%) are irrelevant because changing either of those would affect all applications. Audio output is via headphone jack to my amplifier and speakers. I use a 2017 15" Macbook Pro on whatever the latest OS version is. I do wish I could get the finder search working with the synology SMB shares though. I can just use all the sharing and coauthoring poo poo with the webapps in the rare even that I actually need that and the other person even knows that it's possible (after I showed them two months ago). Oh yeah, this is a good idea that I should have thought of. Failing that, consolidate to iCloud or Onedrive (presuming the latter offers “here but not here” functionality like it does for Windows. (Thanks for nothing, crypto idiots) Synology drive does what you want from anywhere if you configure it to do so. If not, disks have largely returned to a normal $/TB ratio. Just yeet the entire affair on the NAS, you have everything you need so long as you have the disks to accommodate it. It may be worth reviewing what apps are automatically opening when she starts her computer as well.Įvery second that we're not growing BASIL is a second wasted You might want to start by poking around in the energy saver settings I never shutdown my MacBook and never come back to a dead battery, so I'm inclined to think there's some wonky energy saver settings turned on, or a rogue background app doing something behind the scenes. MacBooks aren't Windows laptops - their power management is usually pretty amazing. Just so I'm not crazy, there isn't a setting that keeps the computer up doing stuff in the background when it's shut down right? It's her computer and I don't really mess with it. She says she 100% shuts it down, but I'm more inclined to think she closes the lid before the computer 100% shuts down and it goes to sleep, and dies by the time she gets back to it. My wife is currently using a 2017 MBP and is tired of her computer dying after an extended period of non-use.
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