

Wow he really reminds me of someone



Wow he really reminds me of someone



deleted by creator


You can
ps auxf in the terminalYou can also assume you are compromised and use a solution like a Faraday cage. If you’re trying to detect advanced spyware, it might be better to check network activity from outside the device like what network activity is the router managing for the computer.


I might add one for scaling. I just don’t use it as frequently as trying to meet a file size limit. The scaling is also much easier to remember
ffmpeg -i in.mp4 -vf "scale=600:-1" -an out.mp4
It does get complicated though, when scaling many videos and images, I’ve used something like the following in the past
find . -exec ffmpeg -i {} -vf "scale=1920:1080:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease,pad=1920:1080:-1:-1:color=black" {}.mp4 \;
Those were the only two that showed up when I typed history | grep scale.
It works significantly better than the one I previously posted. It’s also copied from stackoverflow.
bitrate="$(awk "BEGIN {print int($2 * 1024 * 1024 * 8 / $(ffprobe \
-v error \
-show_entries format=duration \
-of default=noprint_wrappers=1:nokey=1 \
"$1" \
) / 1000)}")k"
ffmpeg \
-y \
-i "$1" \
-c:v libx264 \
-preset medium \
-b:v $bitrate \
-pass 1 \
-an \
-f mp4 \
/dev/null \
&& \
ffmpeg \
-i "$1" \
-c:v libx264 \
-preset medium \
-b:v $bitrate \
-pass 2 \
-an \
"${1%.*}-$2mB.mp4"


The version I have was copied from stackoverflow. It doesn’t work very well, it makes a rough estimate to get the video file size under the set value. As an example
resize video.mp4 10
Which then resizes the video to 10 megabytes if possible.
file=$1
target_size_mb=$2 # target size in MB
target_size=$(( $target_size_mb * 1000 * 1000 * 8 )) # target size in bits
length=`ffprobe -v error -show_entries format=duration -of default=noprint_wrappers=1:nokey=1 "$file"`
length_round_up=$(( ${length%.*} + 1 ))
total_bitrate=$(( $target_size / $length_round_up ))
audio_bitrate=$(( 128 * 1000 )) # 128k bit rate
video_bitrate=$(( $total_bitrate - $audio_bitrate ))
ffmpeg -i "$file" -b:v $video_bitrate -maxrate:v $video_bitrate -bufsize:v $(( $target_size / 20 )) -b:a $audio_bitrate "${file}-${target_size_mb}mb.mp4"
I’ll probably replace it eventually.


What does your ~/.bashrc look like? My last change was modifying a playlist command
playlist https://www.youtube.com/@YouTube/videos
or
playlist /home/username/Videos
or just from any directory with files
playlist
And then takes all the videos found at the url or at the path (including within folders), adds them to a playlist, shuffles them, and plays them from mpv.


playlist() {
param=""
# If the first parameter has a length more than 1 character
if [ ${#1} -gt 1 ]; then
param="${@}"
else
param="."
fi
screen mpv $param --shuffle --ytdl-raw-options-add=cookies-from-browser=firefox --loop-playlist=inf --no-keepaspect-window --no-auto-window-resize
}
alias code=codium
alias files=nautilus
alias explorer=nautilus
alias rust="/path/to/.cargo/bin/evcxr"
alias sniffnet="export ICED_BACKEND=tiny-skia; /path/to/.cargo/bin/sniffnet"
alias http-server='/path/to/.cargo/bin/miniserve'
alias iphone='uxplay'
alias airplay='uxplay'
alias watch='screen mpv --ytdl-raw-options-add=remote-components=ejs:github --ytdl-raw-options-add=cookies-from-browser=firefox --no-keepaspect-window '
alias twitch='watch'
alias timeshift-launcher="pkexec env WAYLAND_DISPLAY='$WAYLAND_DISPLAY' XDG_RUNTIME_DIR='$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR' /usr/bin/timeshift-launcher"
alias update="sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y && sudo flatpak update -y && sudo snap refresh"
alias resize="path/to/resize/videos/resize.sh"
playlist() {
param=""
# If the first parameter has a length more than 1 character
if [ ${#1} -gt 1 ]; then
param="${@}"
else
param="."
fi
screen mpv $param --shuffle --ytdl-raw-options-add=cookies-from-browser=firefox --loop-playlist=inf --no-keepaspect-window --no-auto-window-resize
}
gif() { ffmpeg -i $1 -f yuv4mpegpipe - | gifski -o $2 ${@:3} -;}
edit: I don’t like my comment