

Jack Ryan doesn’t figure out Marko Ramius is wanting to defect. (Hunt for Red October)
Photographer and open source software fan.
I’ve also made a few tutorials at http://youtube.com/@AnAustralianPhotographer
Blog: https://anaustralianphotographer.wordpress.com/
Webshop: https://anaustralianphotographer.threadless.com/ where you can buy prints and other merch featuring my photos.
Jack Ryan doesn’t figure out Marko Ramius is wanting to defect. (Hunt for Red October)
My first thought was to start work on a de-replicator. Lot of people about to have a lot of junk in their house and it’ll pile up quickly.
Not sure how long it’ll take until the earth becomes a black hole.
I might also try and put a few new squares on the periodic table.
Edit; now I went back and reread the question, I saw opens source. I will leave the comment as it could be a turnkey solution and stepping stone option to going full open source.
Something like a server on a raspberry pi could be what your after, but I don’t have specific software recommendations for it.
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I’ve just started dabbling, so don’t consider this an expert, but a suggestion.
Synology nas’s have a focus on data sovereignty . They have Android apps that communicate from your phone to the Nas for media.
They can also be setup as a private cloud drive initially accessible by VPN to access and a email / web interface as well as instant messager and webdrive
I gave some though to setting up a small private ‘corporate’ style server where people could access . There’s no subscription fees after the initial hardware purchase as your self hosting.
Hypothetically. I’d see if I could take someone and bring them into a Truman show world without them knowing.
To answer the specific question (and im rusty on winrar but familiar with 7zip), you should be able to change flags for compression ratio and dictionary size.
When a file is compressed using a general purpose compression algorithm it looks for long repeating patterns and substitutes it for a smaller ‘code’ , it builds a dictionary of these codes which is stored in the file so the decompression algorithm knows how to expand it.
Take Morse code for example, E is represented by a single dot while Z is dash dash dot dot and as E is used a lot more frequently in the language. And if we only used the 26 letters, we could compress sentences down to a compact binary code of 1’s and 0’s with dashes as 1’s and 0’s as dots.
Others have said that handbrake is a good tool and i recommend it too. and as i dont know you use case, im assuming you might want to transfer all these from one computer to another. I believe you could use winrar to make volumes up at 4.7gig (or 25gig) and burn a series of DVDs (or blu-rays) with each disc being full, however if one of the discs gets scratched, corrupted (say disc 12 of 20) then all following data might also get corrupted.
Im going to assume that you’ve got these from a recording of a set-top box from a playback transfer of a VHS on its last legs and you’re digitising an old family home movies.
Lets also assume the video was also recorded at full HD, 1080p (ie. 1920x1080 pixels. The video stream is going to show 2,073,600 pixels every frame), and it also recorded the audio as stereo and the box had an encode rate of 25,000kbps (kilobits per second. This figure is used as an example and may be way off reality bitrates).
So every minute of video might equate to 5megabytes of file size (again picking numbers as guesses).
Handbrake can help make this smaller.
You can do this by shrinking the pixels to be displayed. you could downscale the video to 720p (1280x720 pixels. So 921,600 pixels for every frame) and if everything else was kept the same, the files could be nearly halved but you lose out on some of the fine detail.
You could take this even further by compressing down to something like 360 pixels high and that would be ok to watch on a mobile device, but you’d notice the lack of detail on a 4k monitor.
You could keep the resolution the same at 1080p, and get handbrake to compress it further by lowering the bitrate from 25,000kbps to say 8,000kbps, this would affect the image quality, but handbrake does a good job unless you go for a really small bitrate.
Say my video was of a sunset and the camera doesnt move, the pixels displaying the building in the foreground arent going to change colour often so its compression algorithm adapts. Lets say a bird flies across the screen, so the pixels do change, but there might be a bit of blur around the bird as it flies and with more compression this could be more noticable.
One thing handbrake can do that the Set top box couldnt is look ahead with multipass encoding, so it ‘watches’ the movie and takes notes of when there are large changes in the image and can use more bits in the file on the segments of change, for example you watch a tv show and it cuts from a indoor scene to outdoors, this change would use a lot of data, but once it shows the first frame, it can switch to just changing a few pixels each frame.
You could also adjust the framerate of the video if it was recorded in 60 frames per second to 30.
You can also adjust the audio recorded by lowering its bitrate, and also merging the audio tracks from stereo to mono, but compared to video compression, this isnt significant.
Without knowing your usecase, id suggest something like a compression down to a 480pixel or 360 pixel resolution and lowered bitrate as a way to burn a low resolution copy of the movies that could be stored offsite as cheap way to have a backup of last resort.
Edit: in summary, try handbrake, use two pass encoding and just adjust the bitrate first and see if the quality is still ‘good enough’, and if you need smaller files, then try and change the resolution, the frame rate, and audio encoding.
I hope it helps,
sometimes i ssh 127.0.0.1 to mix things up a bit.
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Try this. Red vs blue season 15. https://youtu.be/U06Xp8CV1Fg a reporter appears after the intro about 3 mins in.
I think so too…info dumped for OP.
I think one of the Red vs Blue plotlines did include a reporter as part of the episodes around season 10-13. It got a pretty good following, so much so people called for the voice actors to be part of the official games, but they got.pretty close with caboose venturing into reach. https://youtu.be/Sh3AXwolioQ
So they started season 1 with halo 1 filming people playing the game and putting their own voices over it. They had two groups of soldiers in a box canyon with bases and they were fighting as part of a ‘training’ program for super soldiers like master Chief but were freelancers.
They even promoted the new games by making videos about them playing new levels.
They got access to he official models and did motion capture of fights for videos in seasons 6-8 and I turned out about the time the reporter turned up.
If you get into it, my recommendation is watch seasons 1, 6,7,8 and maybe 20 if you want more. 1 introduces the characters , 6,7,8 is a nice trilogy and 20 is the final season.
Spoiling a little . It turns out project freelancer use an AI fragment and tried tonmake super soldiers and the director did some shady stuff and I think the reporter got wind of some things freelancer did.
My former coworkers (except I don’t know it cause … Someone used the flashy thing…)
I don’t know about repeating or being able to have very long playtimes, but I do know the MIDI (.mid) file format can play songs at extremely small sizes compared to mp3 as it effectively stores the sound like music on a sheet which is played by a synthesizer. Also the MOD file format allows samples to be recorded as a sort of blend of synth and recordings.
Not exactly a dish, but a Pie or a Sausage roll followed by a Lamington.
Aternatively Tim Tams. (I’d like a chocolate biscuit. How much chocolate? Yes.)
I think they mean compatibility with old devices like 5-10 year old handheld devices that don’t get updates.
There was a period where very early digital cameras (think 1.2 megapixels) could only read up to 4 gigabyte memory cards, so camera stores had a stock of smaller cards for when people came in with ‘old faithful’ and couldn’t get the 8, 16 and 32 gig cards working with it.
I’m not sure companies want to risk a corrupted card killing all of. 2 hour recording where the practice of splitting into 4gig chunks for later reconstruction might mean only the latest 15-29 minutes of a recording is lost if corrupted.
You could go to lichess.org and create your own time controls. They let you stipulate an initial time and an increment.
For example you could have a game with a 30 second time for each player and then add 15 seconds for each move after that. Increment ranges go from 0 to 180 seconds.
15 seconds plus 5 seconds per move should be doable.
I believe the time would be banked for each move rather than a hard fixed limit for each move.
You could then create a custom game open to others, or make the game available by link to a friend.
Aussie!, Aussie!, Aussie!!!
The movie I saw in Australia had the quote exactly as is. I’d like to think most of us recognize that a mile is a bit longer than a kilometer and that those distances are common in drag racing, so they’re referred to as is. If we were measuring distance from driving to another city it’s in kilometers and miles aren’t used.
Tape measures have centimeters and inches on them. If I’m using approximations I might use inches and Subway has probably been the main reason Aussies know of inches and a foot.
If I’m doing any scientific measurement like building a cabinet etc, it’s mm and cm.
I’m more into central American rainforests.
Kookaburra photos.
Sounds like a job for an IR camera or Polygondenimland? https://lemmy.world/post/25404145
The Saint will be missed.