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414
Joined
2 yr. ago

Interests: programming, video games, anime, music composition

I used to be on kbin as e0qdk@kbin.social before it broke down.

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  • Been a while since I've made deviled eggs, but here's the ingredients I usually use:

    • 6 eggs
    • Vinegar, 2 teaspoons
    • Dry Mustard, 1/2 teaspoon
    • Salt, 1/2 teaspoon
    • Worcestershire Sauce, 1 teaspoon
    • Mayonnaise, 4 Tablespoons
    • Shake on paprika when done
  • Are you running different versions of the software? (e.g. different versions of ffmpeg, maybe?)

  • I don't like Anubis because it requires me to enable JS -- making me less secure. reddthat started using go-away recently as an alternative that doesn't require JS when we were getting hammered by scrapers.

  • netstat -tp -- that'll show you TCP connections and the associated program, doing a DNS lookup for the IPs they're connected to. You may need elevated permissions to see what some processes are.

    There are a bunch of other options (e.g. -n to get numeric output instead of looking up names, -l to get programs listening for incoming connections, etc); check the man pages for more details.

  • I just right click on the terminal to change the profile to whatever I feel like it should be in the moment (usually red). I do it by reflex, basically. I never felt the need to try to set up automation for different servers, but I expect there's probably a way to do that if you really wanted to.

  • "You love the robot more than me!" 💔️

  • I (manually) set the background color of my terminals depending on the machine I connect to. I currently have profiles for red, green, blue, and black backgrounds with black as my default. I usually use red for ones I want to be especially careful of.

  • If a Zelda game did it, it would suck.

    While I don't find the idea particularly appealing personally, there are modified versions of Zelda games that randomize various aspects of the game (like what items are in which chests) and apparently a decent number of people do actually enjoy playing them. (Usually not on a first playthrough though!)

  • I've been trying to figure out a related sort of video streaming setup for work (without Owncast, but with a similar sort of 24/7 goal plus other considerations) and have been looking into using ffmpeg's capabilities to output either HLS or DASH segments + manifests. (FFMPEG can do both but I don't know which would be better for my needs yet.) The sources I'm working with are RTSP/RTP instead of RTMP and I only need streaming to browser clients currently -- although it working with VLC naturally by pointing it to the manifest is nice.

    HLS and DASH work by having videos split into small chunks that can be downloaded over HTTP, so just replacing the manifest allows for continuous streaming (the client pulls it repeatedly) without the server needing to maintain a continuous connection to the client.(Fan out to CDNs works naturally since the video chunks are just files that can be served by any web server.)

    It should be possible to do some creative things by either creating / modifying the manifests myself with scripting or by piping chunks into another instance of ffmpeg from a script. (I've done something similar using -f image2pipe in the past, but that was for cases where I need to do things like create a video from an image gallery dynamically.) That's as far as I've gotten with it myself though.

    I don't know what the right answer is either, but I'm also interested in finding out and hopeful you get additional responses.

  • I'm not sure how to do what you want with customizing Mint directly, but a possibly simpler alternative solution is to just send two clearly distinguishable USB drives (e.g. label them "1" and "2" with a label maker or get two drives with very different colors) and tell him to install (unmodified) Mint from the first and then have him run a program you provide on the second after that's done to make the other changes.

  • I have an older version of TrueNAS on it from when it was still FreeBSD based (instead of Linux). I might replace it with Scale whenever I get around to doing maintenance on it next -- or maybe just go to stock Debian or something since I don't use most of the bells-and-whistles.

  • I run my NAS that way too. I just mount it and play videos with VLC if I want to watch something I have on it. The main reason I have a NAS is because I ran out of drive bays in my main system a few years ago... Works fine for my needs currently; no need to make it more complicated.

  • Yep. Just like how some sites try to recruit you if you open the JS terminal. Spam knows no limits.

  • You know, I've gotten job offers in Apache logs, but no one's ever asked me out through referer/user-agent spam...

  • Historically, I don't know, but personally, I prefer YYYY-MM-DD style dates since they sort naturally in basically all computer software without having to think about it.

  • I have a folding card table that currently serves as my desk. I don't know how old it is -- 1960s, maybe, based on the style of the brand/sales label on the back? It's almost certainly older than I am, at least... Got it from my uncle back when I was in college and its still working well enough that I haven't bothered to replace it.