I think OpenTracks could be a good lightweight alternative for simply saving tracks.
I think OpenTracks could be a good lightweight alternative for simply saving tracks.
You should also look into the polar pattern of the mic you’re getting.
You’ll probably want a dynamic mic with a cardioid, hypercardioid, supercardioid or subcardioid pattern.
Though it isn’t open source, I want to mention that iZotope RX is the industry standard for audio cleanup in post. Maybe by knowing its name and reading about its features, you’ll be able to write more specific search prompts to find the best (F)(L)OSS alternatives for your situation.
I had no idea. Even though I’ve been travelling Germany regularly, I have never heard of or noticed anything related to this weird trend. However, multiple sources including the survey data that this article is based on confirms the rumor.
I’m still thinking “why?” …
You chessed in your pants?
For good measure, let’s also mention Kodi’s support for 3rd-party add-ons, such as various legitimate (e.g. national broadcasters) VoD services, pirate streams scrapers, live TV (e.g. IPTV or TVHeadend), as well as e.g. Jellyfin/Jellycon. And that’s not even all!
Cool. I like the idea!
Though I don’t drive, I adore the general usefulness of the OSM project, and would find that sort of stuff very useful if I had an ICE car.
OpenStreetMap?
I measure only for fun. That doesn’t suck.
If it’s just Jellyfin, a SBC (like RPi 3B+ or better) running LibreELEC (just enough OS for Kodi) with the Jellycon add-on would do the job.
(There’s also the Jellyfin for Kodi add-on which integrates your Jellyfin media into the native Kodi library, but my success with that has been limited.)
Configure LibreELEC to auto-connect to your phone hotspot, then you’ll be able to control it using the Jellyfin or Kore app for selecting the media, and the Kore app for more advanced Kodi remote control. In my experience, at least, Kore is better for configuring subs and audiostreams, and for fwd/rev and fine-grained seeking.
Actually, I thought that Jellycon as the solution would make it impossible to select the media to play from the Kore app, but I just noticed that it’s actually possible:
In Kore, select “Addons” in the sidebar, tap “Jellycon”, then navigate to the “Content” tab, and tap “Jellyfin libraries”. This means that you can control it all from Kore! - though, imo, the media overview is a bit prettier in the Jellyfin app, but I think the trade-off is worth it for a more sleek solution. You’ll only need the Jellyfin app or webapp for forcing library scannings, editing metadata and such.
Would you mind sharing the list? Or is it just inside your head?
Does the client app have some advanced scanning capabilities, or what do you mean when you’re calling “paperless” a document scanner?
It looks like a cropped screenshot from the repositories view in the Droid-ify app. However, in my Droid-ify app there’s nothing wrong to be seen.
deleted by creator
The Fossify Messages app was recently released.
In Eternity (the app I use to browse Lemmy), the sidebar is equivalent to the “About” tab of a community.
I’m not the same person, but it seems like you’re right. Pound (lb) is a unit for measuring mass. The same is true for kilogram. This actually surprises me to some degree, since it had not been clarified like this to me earlier:
In common usage, the mass of an object is often referred to as its weight, though these are in fact different concepts and quantities. Nevertheless, one object will always weigh more than another with less mass if both are subject to the same gravity (i.e. the same gravitational field strength).
…
Because mass and weight are separate quantities, they have different units of measure. In the International System of Units (SI), the kilogram is the basic unit of mass, and the newton is the basic unit of force. The non-SI kilogram-force is also a unit of force typically used in the measure of weight. Similarly, the avoirdupois pound, used in both the Imperial system and U.S. customary units, is a unit of mass, and its related unit of force is the pound-force.
Source: Wikipedia: Mass versus weight
I think we’re probably confused of this because in common usage, we’ll ask “how much does it weigh” and expect to get an answer in the unit of mass instead of force, just because the mass of the object defines the amount of force it will have in some given gravity condition.
The quality of content in /r/piracy is shit nowadays when compared to !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
I think VLC skips a number of seconds using the arrow keys when the window is in focus, though I’m not sure if the duration can be changed?