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A simple PulseAudio test program for monitoring volume changes on the default sound sink.
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The sony bravia has a HTTP API interacted with using a Pre-Shared key. There's
a more complex auth flow but I've not described it here.
There wasn't any documentation, so I've written some. If you're a TV integrator
don't read this, you'll laugh. I'm probably just getting confused by UPnP.
Disclaimer: I've only tested this on my TV, which is a KDL-50W829B. Your TV
might not have all of the services; see Available services section for how to
discover what your TV supports.
Generate a random string in JavaScript In a short and fast way!
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[Behringer X32 / Midas M32] Split a multi-channel X-USB into virtual outputs with PulseAudio on Linux/Ubuntu
X32/M32 with X-USB on Linux/Ubuntu
This guide is written for all owners of a Behringer X32 or Midas M32 with a X-USB 32x32 channel expansion card. It is directed towards splitting the X-USB channels up in virtual outputs on Ubuntu 18.04 with PulseAudio. The guide may also work for other versions or distro's of Linux with PulseAudio.
It is assumed that the X-USB is installed and connected to a computer. And automatically recognized as a multi-channel soundcard by the operating system. Also note that on Ubuntu 18.04, PulseAudio runs on top of ALSA. ALSA picks up the soundcard and PulseAudio then uses the full soundcard through ALSA to create virtual channels.
.netrc file so you can push/pull to https git repos without entering your creds all the time
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So I have been using tmux for a while and have grown to like it and have since added many many customizations to it. Now once you start getting the hang of it, you'll naturally want to do more with the tool.
Now tmux has a concept of window-group and session and if you are like me you'll want multiple session that connects to the same window group instead of a new window group every time. Basically I just need different views into the same set of windows that I have already created, I don't want to create a new set of windows every time I fire up my terminal.
This is the default case if you simply use the tmux command as your login shell, effectively creating a new group of windows every time you start tmux.
This is less than ideal because, if you are like me, you fire up one-off terminals all the time and you don't want all those one-off jobs to stay running in the background. Plus sometimes you need information fro
bash script to monitor and do something with docker events
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