No I was thinking more like a web front end for command line media player programs, mplayer or whatever. There must be such scripts available.
No I was thinking more like a web front end for command line media player programs, mplayer or whatever. There must be such scripts available.
I’d just run a web server on it and operate it from a phone.
Around here, Target (department store chain) will let you order stuff through their app and pick it up in the store parking lot. If you order through the web you have to wait around inside the store to get it. I still won’t install the app but this issue annoys me.
I don’t really care about it that much. I can usually see enough of the NYT article to tell whether it’s interesting, and then use a paywall bypass if i want to read it. Or in this case I just did a web search and found the Boston Globe article.
Yeah the gift link doesn’t work for me. it gives the first few paragraphs of the article and stops. I didn’t feel like diagnosing it and in this case the headline was clickbait, so i went and pasted the spoiler from a web search.
(Boston globe non-paywalled version)
Just how storms contribute to people’s deaths after the immediate impact is something that needs further study, Hsiang said. But he theorized it includes the health effects of stress, changes in the environment including toxins, people not being able to afford health care and other necessities because of storm costs, infrastructure damage and government changes in spending.
When you can speak and think in the new language without translating to your native language in your head, maybe? That can actually happen pretty fast. You don’t have to become anywhere near fluent.
Such people are sometimes called Grenzemensch (border person). They grow up speaking multiple languages and don’t even realize til they’re older that the languages are different. They just think you have to talk to Uncle Fritz one way and Grandma Mireille a different way.
Direct link to the Quanta article is here. Articleis from 2019:
https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-universal-law-that-aims-times-arrow-20190801/
There is a whole book about this, “Dogs Never Lie About Love”, by Jeffrey Masson.
There are 14 competing standards…
Jeez, we have surveillance hobbyists now.
I thought this old antirez “mythical 10x programmer” post was pretty good:
TBH I’d be happy with a 1AA (1.5 volt not 14500) Anduril light, so I could configure it myself. I have an SP10 Pro that is supposed to use AA’s, but it only works on 14500.
This was some years back but I think the multiple files were primarily because we took breaks in the interview and stopped the camera. I don’t remember if any parts hit the file size limits. I still have the files on a server someplace, so might check.
I’m old enough to remember when printers DIDN’T break. I’m sure lots of HP Laserjet II’s from the 1990s are still cranking out hundreds of pages per day today. Same thing with Okidata dot matrix printers from the era, for those who still want to use them. It was later when printers became crap.
I did the audio-only part with a separate audio recorder because the phone was full. The video is in a bunch of parts but I don’t remember if any are larger than 2GB. It is FAT32 so maybe they must be smaller. I remember the phone ran out of battery power after maybe an hour, and I plugged in a power bank (10000 mah) and that was enough for the rest of the session.
$3000, yowch, but I like the idea of a small-laptop sized screen that is pocket sized. It means being able to read or edit a reasonable amount of text. I don’t need the phone or camera in it for that matter. Actually how about just a foldable HDMI monitor that size, and I can run it from another phone or computer.
Iirc they went broke because their first product was a huge hit, so they followed up with a bunch of useless crap that nobody bought.