I’ll surely check them out, thank you very much!
I’ll surely check them out, thank you very much!
I’m using windscribe VPN from Italy and it works without issues right now
Isn’t nextcloud the “evolution” of owncloud? Except for the UI, are their performance similar?
I’ve never heard of it, but it looks very interesting! Except for the working mechanics, from the “user pov” it works similar to syncthing, did I understand correctly?
I downloaded it and tried to run it, but it gets stuck in a loop and I don’t know how it could be fixed:
error: max_recursion_depth exceeded
error: called from
baseUnitSystem
<unknown>
it seems the problem is in the line
coreUnits = buildCoreUnits(u.baseUnitSystem);
in the file u.m
, I think because u.baseUnitSystem
tries to “call itself”. I don’t know what this should be supposed to do, and have no idea on how to possibly fix it :(
This looks very VERY promising! I’ll try to install it tomorrow and Post here the results! Thanks?
It looks interesting, but more focused on conversions than actual operations it seems:
octave:37> a.value = 100
a =
scalar structure containing the fields:
value = 100
unit = W
octave:38> a.unit = 'W'
a =
scalar structure containing the fields:
value = 100
unit = W
octave:39> b.value = 3
b =
scalar structure containing the fields:
value = 3
unit = s
octave:40> b.unit = 's'
b =
scalar structure containing the fields:
value = 3
unit = s
octave:41> a*b
error: binary operator '*' not implemented for 'scalar struct' by 'scalar struct' operations
automatically no, but perhaps there’s a way to replace it. If there’s a way to check if a variable is “divisible by another symbolic one” then it would be not so hard to implement this behavior
Is this real or just a meme?
Other answer seems to suggest that the problem is that the same podcast can be available, depending on where and who is listening to it, with different length due to different ads injected into. Here’s my probably stupid and completely ignorant suggestion: instead of using timestamps for both begin and end of the ads segment, you could use a timestamp for the beginning, and an hash of the first part of “non-ads” segment. I’ll try to explain better:
|----------------xxxxx--------------------|
^ |___|
The xxx is the ads segment, the ^
is the timestamp of the beginning of the ads, the |___|
is a small duration segment (for example, 0.5 seconds) right after the ads segment. The data of that segment is hashed and used as “end ads segment indicator”.
On the other device, with a different duration of the ads, you should start hashing it to find the corresponding segment.
Is this doable or did I just said a bunch of idiot things?
I use it but I really want a way to sync the subscriptions and watch history with my desktop client, and currently the only way (afaik) is to use piped or invidious
Now I just recommend Owncloud or seafile. They’re both really easy to install and just work out of the box.
Which one is lighter on your opinion?
Will this change something for italian pirates?
Holy words
uhm that’s strange, I just tried executing it on your link and it worked. have you waited at least 5 seconds after running the script?
hi, sorry for the late reply! I finally wrote this nodejs script:
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer');
// This is where we'll put the code to get around the tests.
function findPlaylistUrl(networkUrls) {
for (const url of networkUrls) {
if (url.startsWith('https://vixcloud.co/playlist')) {
return url;
}
}
return ''; // Return an empty string if no matching URL is found
}
(async () => {
// Check if URL argument is provided
if (process.argv.length <= 2) {
console.error('Usage: node get_network_urls.js <URL>');
process.exit(1);
}
const url = process.argv[2];
// Launch a headless browser
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({ headless: 'true' });
const page = await browser.newPage();
// Enable request interception
await page.setRequestInterception(true);
// Capture network requests
const networkUrls = [];
page.on('request', (request) => {
networkUrls.push(request.url());
request.continue();
});
// Navigate to the URL
await page.goto(url);
// Wait for a while to capture network requests (adjust as needed)
await page.waitForTimeout(5000);
// Print the captured network URLs
console.log(findPlaylistUrl(networkUrls));
// Close the browser
await browser.close();
})();
the first argument passed to the script is the url of the webpage. The script uses the puppeteer module to “fake” a browser, in order to receive all the network calls and so on, and then will search through them for the m3u8 playlist. It is very specific and only works on this website, but it can be easily adapted for other websites as well
This is true for literally every selfhosted app
Because I was today years old when I found out this beautiful piece of software exist :D
thank you very much!