Use opusenc directly. It preserves covers and the CLI is literally opusenc --bitrate B INPUT OUTPUT
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Use opusenc directly. It preserves covers and the CLI is literally opusenc --bitrate B INPUT OUTPUT
.
Not surprising. The quality of their articles is usually mediocre at best. I occasionally look at their RSS feed and most of what I see is “How do I achieve <trivial task>”–style posts.
I can’t comment on zypper, but I suggest you use dnf -C
when searching for packages. This will use the local index cache and will skip some of the overhead or checking—and possibly updating—the cache, thus making searches much quicker.
I’ve had great experience with AMD GPUs on Wayland. Unless you run into specific issues, I don’t see a downside of running Wayland. With NVIDIA, chances are you will run into issues very quickly, unfortunately…
Yeah, ISP-related issue is all I can think of. I can connect to the server over v4 no problem, but the broken v6 connectivity to this particular endpoint is strange and nothing I’ve seen before…
I’ve looked at one, but all that I can tell is I stop reaching things somewhere between my ISP and the datacenter the server is in.
Shell tools, mostly. For example: ripgrep, nnn, or newer versions or vim or tmux.
Does pkgsrc need RHEL 7? If so, I wouldn’t be able to use it.
What is the frequency indicator on the right side of your system panel?