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@entropiae
entropiae / Install pyenv on Ubuntu 18.04 + fish shell
Last active May 14, 2024 10:18
Install pyenv on Ubuntu 18.04 + Fish shell
Install pyenv on Ubuntu 18.04 + fish shell
- Install the packages required to compile Python
$ sudo apt-get update; sudo apt-get install --no-install-recommends make build-essential libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev libreadline-dev libsqlite3-dev wget curl llvm libncurses5-dev xz-utils tk-dev libxml2-dev libxmlsec1-dev libffi-dev liblzma-dev
- Download pyenv code from github
$ git clone https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv.git ~/.pyenv
- Define environment variable PYENV_ROOT to point to the path where pyenv repo is cloned
$ echo "set --export PYENV_ROOT $HOME/.pyenv" > ~/.config/fish/conf.d/pyenv.fish
@0xallie
0xallie / lossless-stream-rip-cheatsheet.md
Last active April 27, 2024 04:41
Lossless stream rip cheatsheet

Lossless stream rip cheatsheet

Note: This guide may be slightly outdated. It may be still useful for older releases, but nowadays the vast majority of releases are correctly tagged as WEB-DL (unless it's RARBG/rartv). Protip: prefer looking at file names instead of release names, as they tend to be more accurate.

This is a short cheatsheet to help you determine whether a release from Amazon, Hulu, or Netflix contains the lossless/untouched (as in no further loss of quality compared to what the streaming services provide) video/audio or not. Most newer P2P releases are correctly tagged, but for older releases, it cannot be reliably determined based on the tags alone.

In most cases, non-lossless rips from these services are screen captures (which, when done by professional releasers, should be high quality and contain little to no glitches – see the history section for details), but in some cases they may be simply reencoded from the untouched stream, for example to crop black bars or reencode from a