I think lemmygrad isn’t that bad considering pedo.school is halfway through the list.
I think lemmygrad isn’t that bad considering pedo.school is halfway through the list.
I believe NUCs are more expensive than mini pcs and less bang for buck.
Check out intel i5 9th gen. You can get one with hdd for ~$250. Some of them support m2.
No problem. I think you missed a comma before all. It should look like this:
–sponsorblock-remove,all
Edit: I don’t know why lemmy client I use remove the double comma.
Sure, you can find the documentation under sponsorblock options here: https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp
For categories, maybe sponsorblock github is the best place to find them.
Unfortunately, I don’t know how to scrape information or import it to Plex. Also, check out jellyfin as an alternative of Plex.
For those who don’t know what the hell is Matrix:
Matrix defines a set of open APIs for decentralised communication, suitable for securely publishing, persisting and subscribing to data over a global open federation of servers with no single point of control. Uses include Instant Messaging (IM), Voice over IP (VoIP) signalling, Internet of Things (IoT) communication, and bridging together existing communication silos - providing the basis of a new open real-time communication ecosystem.
Glad you got it working.
I’ve noticed it need a lot of time to start even with good hardware and the confusing part it’ll throw errors rather than doing nothing.
Now to configure sponsorblock, go to settings > advance > select downloader: choose yt-dlp
Then go to settings > downloader > global custom args type this: --sponsorblock-remove,all
Now, for all new videos, it will download the video and remove all sponsorblock marked segments.
https://github.com/Tzahi12345/YoutubeDL-Material
It does support sponsorblock. You need to add a tag within the command and it’ll apply it to all new videos.
Also, if you use docker, I can help you with the installation.
Download this file: https://github.com/Tzahi12345/YoutubeDL-Material/blob/master/docker-compose.yml
Go to terminal and navigate to the folder where you downloaded the file.
Copy this code and hit enter: docker-compose pull
Copy this code and hit enter: docker-compose up
Wait for 15 minutes and in the container log
If successful, it should say “HTTP(S): Started on port 17443” or something similar. This tells you the container-internal port of the application.
Try both ports and see if it works 8998, 17442
Thank you for your detailed suggestion.
I’ve got HP ProDesk 600 G5 Mini i5-9500T off ebay for $190. Best damn purchase ever. Running 21 docker containers and transcode 4k with ease while consuming only 35w.
However, sometimes you need GPIOs especially for school projects.
Hopefully it’ll beat pi4 prices as well
Technically, you’re correct.
However, many websites doesn’t follow the appropriate HTML standards and just abuse h1 and p.
I just tried it with Google.com and it seems to remove all html notations other than text.
It useful in some cases such as wordpress one-page websites which have their story, mission, products, etc…
I don’t think all websites supports read mode.
You don’t tell me what to do.
I said biased at best because it’s cancer at worse. To me, it’s pure democats media and everything should be reported as such.
I live in the other side of the world so I don’t care much about US politics btw.
Fragmented communities is what concerns me the most.
I know tools exists to make it easier to explore communities but I’m not inclined to invest time while instances / communities are dying.
Lemmy need multisubreddit list now.
It’s not about filters. It’s the community it self.
News in Lemmy is biased at best.
I use it to reach all of my services when I go out.
I’ve audiobooks, RSS, music, and cloud.
Don’t go with AIO then
You can use this with tailscale or local only.
https://hub.docker.com/r/linuxserver/nextcloud/
version: “2.1” services: nextcloud: image: lscr.io/linuxserver/nextcloud:latest container_name: nextcloud environment: - PUID=1000 - PGID=1000 - TZ=Etc/UTC volumes: - /path/to/appdata:/config - /path/to/data:/data ports: - 443:443 restart: unless-stopped
I found it while toying with CasaOS. it did work flowlessly without hassle.
https://hub.docker.com/r/linuxserver/nextcloud/
version: “2.1” services: nextcloud: image: lscr.io/linuxserver/nextcloud:latest container_name: nextcloud environment: - PUID=1000 - PGID=1000 - TZ=Etc/UTC volumes: - /path/to/appdata:/config - /path/to/data:/data ports: - 443:443 restart: unless-stopped
There’s environment entry to disable domain check but it’ll not run as you must configure reverse proxy at least to get the certificate. I spent 3 hours yesterday until I gave up and removed it.
It’s kinda misleading stating it can run locally with no reverse proxy without mentioning it’s necessary to complete the installation process.
Source: nextcloud local installation guide.
Probably got resolved yesterday to help with the new Mean Time To Resolve target.