They are wholly independent from the protocol or interface. Ghosting is an electrical issue that is a result of keyboards being a bunch of switches arranged in a matrix. It makes the keyboard's controller register an extra keypress in certain conditions. Nothing to do with how the thing communicates with the host computer.
Key rollover issues can be related to ghosting. The limit for it is once again the keyboard's design at the circuit level, not its communication protocol.
Really they're both related to how cheaply built the keyboard is. That's the only thing.
Good butter straight from a dairy farm is super dangerous though. You can suddenly find yourself standing in your kitchen, no memory of the last 45 minutes, the fridge door open, a greasy knife in your hand, breadcrumbs all over the floor, and half the butter gone. Gotta be careful with that stuff.
Connecting to the network does not have to mean connecting to the internet. Basically every consumer grade router out there is capable of restricting a device to the local network only. It could reach other devices on the network and the other devices would be able to reach it, but it would still be cut off from the internet.
Widewine? Maybe they have some content that requires L1, which still doesn't work on Linux because of totally legitimate technical reasons that are absolutely not at all utter horseshit. Or they might be using some browser APIs that are not properly supported on Linux. There are a few of those.
Afaik lidar doesn't work very well for detecting highly reflective or highly transparent objects. It's possible, but not very straight forward and depends on what else is sorta "in frame". I'm not sure how well lidar would fare when pointed at a large mirror that takes up a rather large portion of its fov.
It wasn't based on the book at all. The book itself is a compilation of short stories, but the movie's script wasn't based on any of those. It was originally written as an original action script that had nothing to do with anything Asimov. The studio that agreed to produce it made the writers rename it to "I, Robot" and insert a bunch of Asimov sounding shit in there, like the 3 laws and some character names.
Don't count on it. On really hot days the interior of a car sitting under the sun can reach petg's glass transition temp. I've had petg prints, also attached to the visor as it happens, soften up and deform in my car.
They are wholly independent from the protocol or interface. Ghosting is an electrical issue that is a result of keyboards being a bunch of switches arranged in a matrix. It makes the keyboard's controller register an extra keypress in certain conditions. Nothing to do with how the thing communicates with the host computer.
Key rollover issues can be related to ghosting. The limit for it is once again the keyboard's design at the circuit level, not its communication protocol.
Really they're both related to how cheaply built the keyboard is. That's the only thing.