Our mission at Speedtest by Ookla is to make the internet faster by providing data and insights on real-world internet speeds. With billions of tests worldwide, we meet you where you are with apps for the devices you use most.
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I'm not sure if I am just completely missing it- but can't seem to find a way to change the playback speed in the Spotify app for macOS. I'm on a Premium Family account.
I looked in the Now Playing bar, settings, etc. In images from the web I usually see it as a button with a 1x label to the left of the playback buttons. I don't seem to have it.
I noticed that this song sounded oddly slow, then realized I couldn't find the speed control.
Hello!
I am a musician and would like to slow down the speed of a music track in spotify desktop (apple). Is this possible? It is possible on YouTube but I prefer to use spotify. I have Spotify premium account. Thank You!
Hey @Cbelle, welcome to the community, and thanks for your question! No, this is not currently possible in Spotify. I did check over in the ideas board, and there's a currently active idea that has been marked as something that Spotify has no plans to implement at the moment, but continued votes and comments are welcome, and there's always a chance this could be revisited in the future!
please help me, when Syncs the download and upload speed is always below 100kbs,, I have checked my internet speed test, it is 50mbps and it is very normal,, I have deleted all the extensions on Google,, I tried downloading a YouTube video, the download speed can be up to 5mbps... I've asked customer service, the answers are always twisted, can anyone help me, thank you very much
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I recently got another stick of 16gb memory (speeds advertised up to 3000mhz) and so i saw my pc had the speed set to the default speed (something like 2133mhz). Since i dont think theres any options to do so in the bios, idk how i would change the speeds. I heard that hp has something called advanced bios in some motherboards but i still dont know how to even boot into that. Can anyone help me out?
NOTE:Memory settings should be adjusted with great care as incorrect or unstable settings may prevent the system from booting up or may fail to load the OS (including corrupting the OS installation).
Windows 11 did not use to have an animation for switching virtual desktops using Ctrl+Win+LeftArrow / RightArrow. It did have an animation for switching using the 4-finger trackpad gesture on laptops, however.
After the Windows 11 22H2 September Update, it now has an animation again, similar to how it did back in Windows 10. However, I've now gotten used to the instant switch :) Additionally, the animation is noticeably slower than the 4-finger trackpad gesture animation - not a lot, but it is noticeable.
Note: There's this post which describes a similar, but different problem from my "problem" - that post describes an actual problem (flickering desktop), while mine is of a preference problem (animation is slower than I'm used to).
many years ago as i was doing setups for many userids i run, i adjusted the mouse speed higher on 3 users i expected to be working mostly with the mouse. i was going to make all users be the same once i found the right speed for me. for various reasons i never did that. i have since forgotten how i did that.
1, i want to know how to change mouse speed (and other settings). i did a duckduckgo search and it seems the popular way involves the xinput command. i know for sure that i did not use xinput to set the mouse speed before because i first used it just a few months ago and i do remember whether i have done things that way when i see how, again. i am confident it was a GUI setting, but i cannot find
i can't find a way to get to Settings Manager > Personal Section. i cannot find any "Settings Manager" but i find "Settings" in Whisker menu. in there is no "Personal Section" so that may be the wrong place. or this is a Mint thing i don't have.
and tried running that. it popped up a little menu. it did have Acceleration and Sensitivity but they were not having any effect i could see. i did go into the "theme" tab and was able to make my pointer red and a bit larger (32). that worked although nothing was saved anywhere in the user's home directory for anything i set.
My apology for having misled you ... Sorry ... The "xfce4-settings-manager" can be called up from anywhere (terminal / panel-button / whisker menu) -- this isn't a "mint" thing afaik. Whisker's launch-button can be configuren with a whole bunch of mini-buttons that call up any command you chose, or you can just activity (on/off) any of the pre-configured mini-buttons. On my systems, the "Settings Manager" button is set to ON -- your whisker's button may be configured differently; idk.
Anyways, the settings' main window title is called "Settings". Contrary to what i said above, the mouse & keyboard settings seem to be located in that window's "Hardware" section -- but that could have been changed by your distro. The mouse & keyboard settings popup has a drop-down list of devices in its "Devices" tab; did you select your mouse from that list? Adjusting the acceleartion sure works just fine on my system(s). Note: make sure that you have the correct driver for your mouse configured (ie for logitech's wireless combo).
Remember to edit the subject of your topic to include the [SOLVED] tag once you're satisfied with the answers or have found a solution (in which case, don't forget to share it as well), so that other members of the community can quickly refer to it and save their time. Pretty please!
yeah, i did find the command. but i am very sure the first time was a GUI way to get there without having to configure it. but now that i know the command, i am set. i mostly use a bash shell command line, so a command is fine for me.
now, i am looking for which file these mouse settings get saved in, so i know what to copy when i upgrade to Xubuntu 22.04 LTS on a new laptop. so far all i did was change the theme for the mouse and nothing is changed in the user home directory.
the mentioned driver. is that for just configuring or also for using? the mouse works. it just moves the pointer slower. i just want to have it ove faster. one of my many users does. i just forget which one. the settings i get from that command don't do it.
i'm on Xubuntu 18.04.6. upgrading involves figuring out which new packages correspond to which old packages and testing. i do have a spare drive with 20.04 on it. i'm wondering if 22.04 will be worth waiting for. if it goes with Wayland that might be a challenge.
by mouse speed i mean the ratio between the distance of movement of mouse device and movement of pointer indicator (index of location where mouse events happen). i have a limited space available to move my mouse. it roughly corresponds to the pointer moving the full screen. that makes it awkward sometimes. i want to increase the speed so that less mouse movement is needed. then i want to discover which file it stores this setting in and copy it among all my users so the speed is the same for all. but i don't see this setting in /usr/bin/xfce4-mouse-settings.
Reasons such as lack of storage and less powerful hardware can be the suspects for slower speeds. From cleaning out unused programs and apps to hardware upgrades, there are some things you can do to speed up Windows 10 and get your PC up and running back to optimal performance.
To check for updates, open the Windows menu, then select Settings > Update & Security > Windows Update > Check for Updates. If updates are available, select Install now. Restart your PC and check to see if it runs better.
PC performance can take a toll when there are many programs and apps opened at the same time. Many installers will instruct Windows to run their programs as soon as you start up your PC which slows down your system performance.
One of the features built into Windows 10 is Disk Cleanup. It allows you to get rid of unused temporary files that build up on your PC, including image thumbnails, downloaded program files and temporary internet files.
Windows 10 comes with a bunch of special effects that makes the user experience look and feel nicer. These are applied by default in Windows and in other features programmed to fade in and out from view. Other special features that can slow your speeds include translucency and animations.
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