Migrated to https://github.com/evenevan/export-ms-teams-chats
if your images are large, you may need to set a larger temp directory on a different disk. set this env variable in a unix-like shell or similar. git bash works well.
export MAGICK_TEMPORARY_PATH=D:\tempconvert a .tif to .jpeg while also scaling the height and width by half
magick mosaic.tif -resize "50%" mosaic.jpegI need more storage. I don't want to pay a whole lot for a JBOD. I found https://makerworld.com/en/models/460543#profileId-369045 and decided to modify it a bit.
Share your contact information in a fun way with a NFC tag.
The resulting NFC tag is compatible with both iOS and Android, see the notes for additional information.
This process will probably take you about 5-10m to create a vCard, about 5-10m to host your .vcf file, and 5m to write the vCard to your NFC tag.
get *.osm.pbf files from https://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Planet.osm#Worldwide_extract_sources. i used http://download.openstreetmap.fr/ as they have a nice extract of canada
tilemaker didn't work for me, the output didn't show many of the layers until i was zoomed in a lot
using planetiler in docker:
docker run -e JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS="-Xmx5g" -v "$(PWD):/data" ghcr.io/onthegomap/planetiler:latest --osm-path=/data/canada-latest.osm.pbf --output=/data/canada-latest.mbtiles --downloaddownload the esa sentinel-2 data zip
https://dataspace.copernicus.eu/explore-data/data-collections/sentinel-data/sentinel-2
- press the green "explore sentinel-2 data"
https://sentiwiki.copernicus.eu/web/sentinel-2
- the downloaded files should be as described here
the file of interest is probably the one with TCI (true color image) in the filename. for me it is a .jp2 file.
using this format https://www.gpsbabel.org/htmldoc-development/fmt_unicsv.html
in the universal csv format, we can use
lat, long, alt, time, date, temp, speed
use below for the time and date fields. with the gpsbabbel gui, the utc offset can also be specified
to get utc_d and utc_t, use `=TEXT(DATE(MID(A1,1,4),MID(A1,6,2),MID(A1,9,2)),"yyyy/mm/dd")
I want to keep my OneNote notebooks from work/school for future reference or whatever. This gist documents two methods that worked for me with their advantages and caveats.
This is probably the easiest, but may take a while and involves downloading a bunch of large notebooks onto your device. For me, I ran into issues with one specific notebook as noted by Mark and Stryderis.
You will need the Microsoft 365 version of OneNote on a desktop computer for this method. Make sure it isn't the OneNote for Windows 10 version.
