Pictured is me finding out about today’s exam yesterday.
Heavy on the nevermind phase.
In the end I think I passed.
Pictured is me finding out about today’s exam yesterday.
Heavy on the nevermind phase.
In the end I think I passed.
Ah, nice! I tried to avoid powershell while on windows, so don’t know much about it.
You can get all the IDs using yt-dlp
yt-dlp --flat-playlist --print id <playlist>
Assuming you’re on linux, you can add at the end to save the list to a file. ids_all.txt
You can also add
--compat-options no-youtube-unavailable-videos
to get only the list of available videos instead and then, again assuming you’re on linux, do
diff ids_all.txt ids_available.txt
to get the odd ones out. That’s the simplest I could come up with. You’ll have to hope you can use the wayback machine, or a good old exact search to turn up what video that ID actually referred to
There’s a million alternatives that do the exact same thing. Fastfetch is just better, since it’s still maintained, and not painfully slow. I used to think neofetch being slow was kind of cute. Then I switched to fastfetch, and now I can’t bear the years neofetch takes to run.
Mint handled my 1060 really well and it’s really good on arch too with the newer driver. Still just running Xorg with cinnamon, though. I guess mileage still varies with this stuff.
Is it HURD’n’ time?
He’s secretly hoping Q appears anyway.
My buddy was in a class doing a programming test. It was a couple minutes until turn in time, so he went to zip up the source files. He had already ran the appropriate zip command previously, so he pressed up three times and then enter. It appears he had miscalculated, because the command that ran was rm *.c
. There were no backups.
I’m just here to lay some hate on the proprietary apps: they bad.