running:
bash create-vod-hls.sh beach.mkv
will produce:
beach/
|- playlist.m3u8
|- 360p.m3u8
running:
bash create-vod-hls.sh beach.mkv
will produce:
beach/
|- playlist.m3u8
|- 360p.m3u8
@echo off | |
echo Uninstalling KB3075249 (telemetry for Win7/8.1) | |
start /w wusa.exe /uninstall /kb:3075249 /quiet /norestart | |
echo Uninstalling KB3080149 (telemetry for Win7/8.1) | |
start /w wusa.exe /uninstall /kb:3080149 /quiet /norestart | |
echo Uninstalling KB3021917 (telemetry for Win7) | |
start /w wusa.exe /uninstall /kb:3021917 /quiet /norestart | |
echo Uninstalling KB3022345 (telemetry) | |
start /w wusa.exe /uninstall /kb:3022345 /quiet /norestart | |
echo Uninstalling KB3068708 (telemetry) |
#!/bin/bash | |
url=http://redefininggod.com | |
webarchive=https://web.archive.org | |
wget="wget -e robots=off -nv" | |
tab="$(printf '\t')" | |
additional_url=url.list | |
# Construct listing.txt from url.list | |
# The list of archived pages, including some wildcard url |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Script for installing tmux on systems where you don't have root access. | |
# tmux will be installed in $HOME/local/bin. | |
# It's assumed that wget and a C/C++ compiler are installed. | |
# exit on error | |
set -e | |
TMUX_VERSION=1.8 |
0-mail.com | |
0815.ru | |
0clickemail.com | |
0wnd.net | |
0wnd.org | |
10minutemail.com | |
20minutemail.com | |
2prong.com | |
30minutemail.com | |
3d-painting.com |
#!/bin/bash | |
clear | |
trap "" SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM SIGTSTP | |
#get username, check if its taken, and if its proper length | |
while true | |
do | |
echo -n "Create username: " |
This American Life limits their podcast feed to only the most recently aired episode, but you can download every episode (or a range) using a one-liner like this:
for i in {1..600};do wget http://audio.thisamericanlife.org/jomamashouse/ismymamashouse/$i.mp3 ;done
After installing Arch on my Raspberry Pi, internet worked out of the box: I could plug it into the router, turn it on, ssh in and start downloading things. But the router is in my housemate's bedroom, which isn't ideal. If I want the Pi to be connected to the internet in my room, I need it to be connected to my laptop. (Another option would be a USB wifi dongle, of course.) This is how I did it. Much credit goes to the Ubuntu wiki's Connection sharing page.
I should disclaim that I don't fully understand networking stuff, and some of what I say might be wrong. I also didn't write this as I was going; so while I've consulted my browser and shell histories, it's possible I've forgotten some steps.
My laptop is running Gentoo, and this is where most of the work has to be done. It connects to the internet through wifi, on interface wlan0
. The ethernet port is eth0
, and eth0
is also the name of the ethernet port on the Pi.
Step zero: plug ev
echo 'export PATH=$HOME/local/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc | |
. ~/.bashrc | |
mkdir ~/local | |
mkdir ~/node-latest-install | |
cd ~/node-latest-install | |
curl http://nodejs.org/dist/node-latest.tar.gz | tar xz --strip-components=1 | |
./configure --prefix=~/local | |
make install # ok, fine, this step probably takes more than 30 seconds... | |
curl https://www.npmjs.org/install.sh | sh |
#!/bin/bash | |
set -e | |
# Usage: | |
# rsync_parallel.sh [--parallel=N] [rsync args...] | |
# | |
# Options: | |
# --parallel=N Use N parallel processes for transfer. Defaults to 10. | |
# | |
# Notes: |