it will just crash on you before you even find out
Older versions may have had issues with that, but I haven’t encountered any crashing in over 2 years. (And I i do 6 youtube videos per month with it)
it will just crash on you before you even find out
Older versions may have had issues with that, but I haven’t encountered any crashing in over 2 years. (And I i do 6 youtube videos per month with it)
Look at the date of the linked RFC documents…
Being super cheap does make the X32 family pretty popular at the entry level.
Before I retired I was also almost entirely analog.
But these days it appears that even the gear targeted at small bar bands is leaning heavily toward a fully digital workflow.
Most of the apps to interface with pro level mixing consoles and lighting boards are Mac / iPad . Very few for Android, limited Windows options and pretty much nothing for Linux.
Live production stuff as well.
So much of the available “industry standard” software is fully proprietary and Apple only.
Anyone who is trying to make money from their videos isn’t likely to have any incentive to be on Odysee, unless thay start paying for views with something other than their useless in-house crypto.
Plus, the audience on Odysee is miniscule compared to pretty much any other video platform.
they turn around and lock all but the most basic features behind a pay wall.
To be fair, that was forced by the music industry.
If they didn’t licence the tabs and come up with a payment system they were going to be sued into oblivion.
Exactly. If you want to live on the bleeding edge, you have to accept that there will be risks.
Nobody should be running their main/only/mission critical machine on an unstable branch of any software.
It’s literally in the name unstable.
Or maybe for identifying when it fails
That’s it exactly.
Ad-Free YouTube playback capabilities.
The last time I tried, VLC could already do that.
People who daily drive Linux are not the ones who spread the old idea that it’s “too techy”.
I don’t think it’s impossible for a FOSS solution to do this, but I don’t think anyone has tackled it, either
That’s just a software problem. Not all that difficult, assuming the hardware manufacturers don’t lock you into some bullshit locked down proprietary cloud control thing.
Probably 2, but as I always use my own images for my desktop anyway, the default wallpaper really doesn’t matter to me.
In my case, specifically Windows 95.
Thank you.
We are encouraged to use the Microsoft office suite if tools at work, and I still haven’t figured out how to use OneNote to improve my life.
Isn’t this thread pretty anti-advertising?
Or at least anti-being advertised to?
Discovery becomes a huge drawback in that scenario.
Musicians (and all artists) ultimately want to get their art in front of an audience.
Right now the existing big platforms serve that purpose.
Any new service is in a bit of a chicken-and-egg situation trying to attract an audience with no content and trying to attract content with no audience.
Lightburn for controlling laser engravers.
It’s pretty much the only choice on Linux (though it is cross platform). Free 30 day trial, then ~$80 lifetime licence.
The other choice is LaserGRBL, which is open source, but doesn’t seem to have a Linux port for some reason. And it has a lot fewer features, with a more complex workflow.