Saw this downloader on my feed today, and it looks neat.
DaGeek247 of https://dageek247.com
Saw this downloader on my feed today, and it looks neat.
torrent galaxy has what you’re after (as a boxset), and does imdb id search results.
Nope. SD cards can do terabytes now. Walking away with it is probably the easiest part of the whole heist plan.
Getting around the obscure hardware and software DRM schemes, moving that much data quick enough that you don’t have to make two trips, getting the knowledge required to do all that… I figure those would probably be harder.
I ended up using a cam for a movie from 2009 to check to see if the movie had differences between the theater version and the DVD release. It didn’t but it was neat that I could, 15 years later.
So I respect it, but also, good god will I never actually watch them for the actual movie itself.
They make you compile it because it’s non-free software and you’re beta testing it in order to use it for free.
It has nothing to do with linux. They do the same for the windows beta.
They’ve changed their error message. Now they’re just fucking with us.
Both. How quickly a server can send a webpage with images (even if they’re small) is directly proportional to the storage mediums seeks times. The worse the seek times, the less ‘responsive’ a website feels. Hard drives are a terrible location to keep your metadata.
The server scan will search for the files, look them up and grab metadata, and then store that metadata in the metadata location. If your metadata location is the same spot as your movie, it will cause some major thrashing, and will significantly increase the scan time for jellyfin. Essentially, it gets bogged down trying to read and write lots of tiny files on the same drive, the absolute worst case scenario for a hard drive to have.
If the movies are on a hard drive, and the metadata on an ssd (or even just a different hard drive) the pipeline will be a lot less problematic.
You can significantly speed this process up by putting the cache folder on an ssd, instead of the same hard drive the videos are on.
Skipping the audio encode from a blu-ray will lose op out on a surprisingly large amount of space, especially with 110 source disks. I checked one of my two hour blu-ray backups. Audio will net you about nine audio tracks (english, french, etc). A single 5.1 448kbs audio track will take about 380MB of space per movie. Multiply that by nine (the number of different tracks in my sample choice) and you’ll get 3420MB per disk. That means about 376GB of space is used on audio alone for ops collection. A third of a terabyte. You can save a lot of space by cutting out the languages you don’t need, and also by compressing that source audio to ogg or similar.
By running the following ffmpeg command;
ffmpeg -i out-audio.ac3 -codec:a libvorbis -qscale:a 3 small-audio.ogv
I got my 382MB source audio track down to 200MB. Combine that with only keeping the language you need, and you end up dropping from 376GB down to 22GB total.
You can likely save even more space by skimping on subtitles. They’re stored as images, so they take up a chunk of space too.
I did a comparison trying to find where my personal “good enough” and techinically indistinguishable crf levels were at a little while ago. It may be worth looking into as a start. I’ve never really touched hdr before though.
God no. X264 is way worse than x265 is way worse than av1 for quality by size.
Yes, everything made in the past 15 years can do x264, but that does not mean it is a good idea. Only do x264 if you have a specific device that needs it. Otherwise, x265 is a better choice for long term storage.
Here’s the blog post about it; https://www.da.vidbuchanan.co.uk/blog/netflix-on-asahi.html
I quoted the article. I read it, and it’s stupid. Also, religious ≠ believes in gods. 28% of Americans are “Nones” and growing, and that number includes religious people.
The number you quoted is practically the same the one i quoted. I’m not sure why you bothered.
I completely missed your quoting the article. My bad. Even the article is saying the premise in the title is silly / unknowable. I was wondering why you were saying the same things the article was; that arguing for piracy using religion is a bit of a mixed bag.
But whether someone cares about the status of gods’ existence matters insomuch as it’s the core precondition of the article. If gods don’t exist, wondering what they think is like wondering what Harry Potter thinks about piracy—interesting as a shower thought, but hardly relevant to making real moral decisions.
The core question is not moot because more than half the population agrees with the articles core premise. It doesn’t matter if god exists, it matters that most everybody thinks one exists. Using that belief to discuss piracy is not a flawed discussion, and it is not dependent on the actual existence of a god, just the existence of people’s belief in them.
Prove gods exist, else the core question is moot.
75% of americans consider themselves religious. Your statement is wrong. Ignoring three quarters of the population because you can’t get over the existence of religion is a personal failure.
Nobody here actually cares about the status of god’s existence. All of us care about piracy. Find somewhere else to stand on your religion soapbox.
Hell, while we’re here, did you even consider reading the article? It makes for some pretty great reading.
It’s linux / osmc running on it, basically a whole pc. So, yes, it can run external stuff.
The vero V supports av1. As far as im aware it is the most modern player with support for most every codec (except dolby vision) out there.
It’s not just limited to Canada, it’s limited to a single ISP in Canada posting their traffic stats.
Article notes this doesn’t account for VPNs.
In case you haven’t seen them, i just wanna make sure you’ve heard of these guys; https://notawheelchair.com/
You understand that, for everyone except for a complete network pro, that is worse for security and privacy, right?
Don’t get me wrong, it’s great that you can.
But the reason piracy websites struggle so much with long term stability isn’t because they’re hosting the wrong software.