Haha, I actually had earbuds on with brown noise playing, but I could still hear the barking faintly. My brain just decided to hyper focus on it :/
“…could’ve made it but it’s cozy in the rut…”
Haha, I actually had earbuds on with brown noise playing, but I could still hear the barking faintly. My brain just decided to hyper focus on it :/
A few nights ago I was trying to read a book, and there was a dog across the road who wouldn’t stop barking. I was reading a single page for 15 minutes until I was finally able to tune him out.
And watch what exactly?
Yeah, and I am questioning, why is that the case. Because client apps are not doing the transcoding, server is.
It’s a really nice app, I like the fact that it uses mpv, but you cannot pick the stream quality in this app? I always avoid re-encoding (picking different stream quality from jellyfin) but I noticed that it’s missing in Findroid.
I really hope there aren’t people stupid enough to buy or even want that.
Keepass XC on PC, Keepass DX on Android, Syncthing to sync database
Works flawlessly!
Name two that aren’t Bing or Google and that don’t suck ass.
So what would be a good solution to this? What is something simple that bots are bad at but humans are good at it?
I was just reading this issue on Github last night and I really don’t see how PeerTube is any better than a traditional server for hosting videos. The peer part of it seems to have such a miniscule impact on the whole thing that it just feels like a gimmick. I’ve read that the biggest problem for PeerTube instance hosts is storage and not the bandwidth. The only thing that peers can save you is tiny bit of bandwidth from what I understand.
So from what I’ve gathered, relying on peers only for hosting the video is completely unviable. And that makes sense, especially for old, unpopular videos, there will be no peers to begin with. Even if every video on the site is being “seeded” by viewers, the reliability of connection and bandwidth would be very bad because you can’t know if the peer is some guy on the dial up connection. Even in the perfect scenario where everyone had very reliable connection and good bandwidth, the fact that browsers don’t support p2p protocol and rely on a hack/workaround to use it, will mean that there will be delays. So starting the video and rewinding would be painfully slow.
Is there something that I’m missing, or is PeerTube really not that much better than a “normal” video hosting server?
Fair enough. It’s nice to have something that just works out of the box and doesn’t need much configuration, for sure.
And even though most points you have mentioned are actually doable in OBS, they need additional setup/configuration or a plugin. But I personally don’t mind that, and in most cases I prefer that, especially granular configuration of video settings.
Why do you find OBS to be suboptimal? I never used OBS on Linux, is it not working well there?
Jumblie #254 🔶🟦🔴💚 6 guesses in 1m 31s https://jumblie.com
Yes, it’s a reference to an article that’s been posted here on lemmy the other day: https://lemmy.world/post/15229790
They realized that they don’t have to make good a game, they can make a bad game and just advertise the shit out of it.
It was hit or miss since 1337x started showing CF captcha thingie.
The app (locally, on your device) checks if someone from your contact list installed (became available) on Signal, and if they did, you get notified by the app.
Someone can get notified only if they already have you in their contact list (so they already have your phone number), and have Signal installed.
I still wish you could choose if you want others to be notified tho…