text stringlengths 7 369 |
|---|
[1965.22 --> 1967.16] But also fell in love with Hugo. |
[1967.34 --> 1968.32] Well, yeah, of course. |
[1968.44 --> 1972.60] Yeah, Hugo is, Hugo can be used as a publishing tool for Obsidian. |
[1972.86 --> 1979.48] It supports all the essential features, super fast builds, and of course, it's open source, self-hostable, and GitHub Actions deployable. |
[1979.48 --> 1985.32] Like you, I'm still migrating many of my notes from elsewhere to .md files and Obsidian. |
[1985.60 --> 1990.06] So my own instance is rather bare, but if you're interested, and he gives it to us here, |
[1990.70 --> 1993.80] and he says on iOS, there's this app called Working Copy. |
[1994.22 --> 1998.12] That's an amazing Git app that plays nicely with GitHub and has good markdown. |
[1998.58 --> 2001.40] So you don't have to pay for the Obsidian app if you don't want to. |
[2001.94 --> 2004.02] I haven't found an equivalent yet on Android. |
[2004.14 --> 2005.90] I just used the GitHub web UI. |
[2005.90 --> 2010.86] A lot of people wrote in to say Obsidian, so thank you, everybody. |
[2010.98 --> 2014.60] I think I'm going to try it and maybe try using Nextcloud to do the syncing. |
[2014.70 --> 2015.92] I don't know if I'm way off base there. |
[2016.08 --> 2018.16] That's what I've been using for a while on the LAN. |
[2018.96 --> 2022.46] It's backed by Git as well, and there are a few conflicts every now and again, |
[2022.68 --> 2025.14] but I just ignore them, and it seems to be fine. |
[2025.78 --> 2028.72] But it doesn't do picture text recognition, right? |
[2029.14 --> 2029.82] It can. |
[2030.38 --> 2032.02] It can with a plugin or something? |
[2032.52 --> 2032.78] Yeah. |
[2032.98 --> 2033.24] Okay. |
[2033.42 --> 2034.12] Well, I'll give it a go. |
[2034.12 --> 2034.98] You know what? |
[2035.04 --> 2035.98] I'll give it a gosh darn go. |
[2036.52 --> 2039.98] A lot of people also have been giving me some tips on my Android journey, |
[2040.04 --> 2041.52] because, you know, I'm an Android guy now, Alex. |
[2041.86 --> 2042.66] Switch to Android. |
[2043.20 --> 2045.58] This is like the new CrossFit or veganism, isn't it? |
[2045.86 --> 2046.04] Yeah. |
[2048.06 --> 2051.50] Yeah, I use Graphene OS, by the way. |
[2053.58 --> 2055.04] Of course, it's the new Arch. |
[2055.34 --> 2055.68] Yeah. |
[2055.68 --> 2059.06] So people have been telling me to check out NewPipe. |
[2059.54 --> 2060.98] And you know what? |
[2061.30 --> 2065.30] I've heard about NewPipe for years, so I went in with expectations a-blazin'. |
[2065.30 --> 2069.02] And, man, have I been disappointed with NewPipe. |
[2069.22 --> 2071.88] First of all, I appreciate getting out of the YouTube app. |
[2071.94 --> 2073.34] So I do get where y'all are coming from. |
[2073.42 --> 2074.24] Like, that part I get. |
[2074.28 --> 2075.40] It downloads real good. |
[2075.48 --> 2076.20] It does in the background. |
[2076.32 --> 2077.34] Multi-threaded download. |
[2077.34 --> 2079.82] It sends it out to your preferred video player. |
[2079.96 --> 2081.48] I like all of that a lot about NewPipe. |
[2082.28 --> 2085.10] And I like that, you know, I can have my own subscription list in there. |
[2085.42 --> 2088.90] But you know what is ridiculous about NewPipe, otherwise a decent app? |
[2089.32 --> 2091.54] It doesn't show you live streams. |
[2091.86 --> 2093.76] Like, if you go to a channel that's live. |
[2094.38 --> 2095.70] Sorry for my ignorant question. |
[2095.82 --> 2096.64] What is NewPipe? |
[2097.04 --> 2097.58] What does it do? |
[2098.42 --> 2101.40] Sorry, I got all worked up, because, man, did I get inundated with NewPipe. |
[2101.90 --> 2104.22] I had all this NewPipe in my face. |
[2104.22 --> 2112.30] It is an alternative YouTube client that's, like, lean, mean, customized machine. |
[2112.92 --> 2116.58] It's great if you have, like, a list of subscriptions or YouTubers that you want to follow. |
[2116.82 --> 2118.10] You pop them all in there. |
[2118.24 --> 2119.72] It does really good downloads. |
[2119.86 --> 2123.92] It'll just do, like, you know, two or three threaded downloads super fast. |
[2124.18 --> 2125.42] It's great for all that. |
[2125.58 --> 2127.34] But it does not support live streams. |
[2127.56 --> 2130.30] And it does not support timestamps and videos. |
[2130.90 --> 2131.42] Well, that stinks. |
[2131.90 --> 2133.92] That just, it's a non-starter. |
[2134.76 --> 2137.96] Particularly these days, where every Tom, Dick, and Harry has a YouTube channel. |
[2138.40 --> 2142.46] And, you know, like, it's almost like anybody can just make content and put it on the internet for free. |
[2142.60 --> 2143.16] Yeah, yeah. |
[2143.22 --> 2145.10] And people will listen to it, you know. |
[2146.80 --> 2149.92] You really need those chapter markers in some YouTubers. |
[2150.24 --> 2151.24] You really, really do. |
[2151.66 --> 2153.76] And I'm already paying Googs for the premium. |
[2154.54 --> 2158.94] So I get the download in the YouTube app, which is actually better on Android than it is on iOS. |
[2158.94 --> 2160.20] The download in the background stuff. |
[2160.32 --> 2162.78] Turns out stuff can just run in the background perpetually and download. |
[2163.40 --> 2164.12] For better or for worse. |
[2164.22 --> 2165.38] But thank you, everybody. |
[2165.80 --> 2167.00] Keep sending in your suggestions. |
[2167.26 --> 2169.94] And if you'd like to boost in, I got a hot tip for you, Alex. |
[2170.48 --> 2172.70] But I figured we'd do this in the show. |
[2172.92 --> 2175.04] So that way people can see how this works. |
[2175.04 --> 2179.80] With the boosts, they have this mechanism called the split. |
[2180.70 --> 2183.64] And the split is what it sounds like. |
[2183.68 --> 2187.66] You can say 30% of the boost goes to Chris. |
[2187.80 --> 2189.82] 30% of the boost goes to Alex. |
[2189.88 --> 2193.64] And, like, 70% or whatever it is, you know, goes to the network. |
[2193.70 --> 2195.56] Or 40%, depending on how many hosts it is. |
[2195.56 --> 2196.70] You know, you could do different splits. |
[2196.74 --> 2197.20] You could do 20. |
[2197.20 --> 2198.08] All the way around. |
[2198.92 --> 2202.56] And to participate in that, you need to have a lightning address. |
[2203.10 --> 2211.10] And for, you know, until, like, I don't know, four months ago, you had to run a full node to get that address. |
[2211.10 --> 2220.74] But now, the group over at Albie, which makes a browser extension that I like, I've had some meetings with them, and I think they're good folks. |
[2221.66 --> 2224.78] They have integrated with the whole podcasting 2.0 stuff. |
[2224.96 --> 2231.00] And when you go sign up at Albie, they can generate you a value block code that you can give to me. |
[2231.34 --> 2233.28] And I can put in the splits for you. |
[2233.54 --> 2235.64] And you don't have to have a self-hosted node at all. |
[2235.64 --> 2243.40] Now, you're letting them host it, which is not necessarily great security practice, but we're not talking, like, thousands of dollars here, right? |
[2244.02 --> 2247.10] And then they manage all of the lightning liquidity stuff for you. |
[2247.32 --> 2253.54] And then if you want, you can then plug in another app they've created called Saturn, SatEarn. |
[2254.08 --> 2258.70] And that will give you the live boost dashboard so you can get the boosts as they come in live. |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.