I hereby claim:
- I am sunk818 on github.
- I am sunk8182 (https://keybase.io/sunk8182) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASCDHpdVbVr5wWG2DletgxjDBvZUxVbyY9TW2abtqhWp4wo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
sudo apt-get update | |
sudo apt-get install golang-go -y | |
wget https://dist.ipfs.io/go-ipfs/v0.4.10/go-ipfs_v0.4.10_linux-386.tar.gz | |
tar xvfz go-ipfs_v0.4.10_linux-386.tar.gz | |
sudo mv go-ipfs/ipfs /usr/local/bin/ipfs |
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
The easiest way to "convert" MKV to MP4, is to copy the existing video and audio streams and place them into a new container. This avoids any encoding task and hence no quality will be lost, it is also a fairly quick process and requires very little CPU power. The main factor is disk read/write speed.
With ffmpeg
this can be achieved with -c copy
. Older examples may use -vcodec copy -acodec copy
which does the same thing.
These examples assume ffmpeg
is in your PATH
. If not just substitute with the full path to your ffmpeg binary.
Sometimes when working with Git you'd like to commit binary files.
But those files won't have clean comparisons with Git standard diff
command.
Fortunately Git is a great tool that comes with a lot of possibilities…
If, as a developer, you are under company constraints and must use MS Office,
you'll encounter some issues when trying to diff MS Office files.
Maybe you're asking yourself: what's the problem with that?
#!/bin/bash | |
# | |
# GCloud startup script to auto-restart any instances with 'revive' tag. | |
# The calling machine must have Read/Write access to compute API!! | |
# I use this to reboot preemptible instances. | |
# Output is logged to /tmp/revive.log | |
indent() { sed 's/^/ /'; } | |
revive_instances() { |