If you get a YouTube music subscription can you use it to rip higher bitrate audio? I thought free videos bitrate was capped, I’m just using yt-dlp to archive videos/channels at the moment
If you get a YouTube music subscription can you use it to rip higher bitrate audio? I thought free videos bitrate was capped, I’m just using yt-dlp to archive videos/channels at the moment
Likely not, but I’m happy and sad that this seems to be a common scenario.
Sharpening the résumé as we speak
Dump it into ec2-type lol. It’s not a product that can or should be cloud native without becoming a security nest of hornets for customer cybersecurity departments.
Our solutions architect is like this. Not because we’re working on anything important at the moment, but because we keep pushing back important upgrades further and further, making each day a more challenging operation to keep our rickety-ass distributed monolith alive.
We were supposed to upgrade from Java 8 on Springboot 2.1 to 17 on Springboot 3. That got wiped off the table because the bosses think shoving our inefficient solution into a cloud product is what will attract customers.
Looks around. You guys are still streaming?
JetBrains for everything
They quietly jot down everyone’s updates, circle the words they don’t understand, attempt to look up what those words mean, then say them in the next stand up completely out of context and incorrectly.
Whose router are you using? Your own? Local traffic shouldn’t behave any differently unless you’re using their equipment which may not have the settings you want configured correctly.
T-Mobile uses CG-NAT which means you don’t have a dedicated, proper IPv4 address associated with your public facing network. You will need to use a reverse proxy setup like Tailscale in order to regain external access for Plex. You can also try to call T-Mobile and ask for a static IP address, then actually doing it only happens on rare occasions from what I’ve seen.
Depends what timelines and what types of users were talking about, in my opinion. Users migrating who have contributed good content and/or moderation should have the patience to get through most of the growing pains. Casual users who show up just to browse and maybe up or downvote a few things don’t add a lot of value up front anyway, so the attrition of those users won’t matter too much in the long run. Those types of users will likely be back in the future once the kinks get worked out, or will be replaced by users of the same type. Patience is the game.
Home theater pc