

I spent too muchtime trying to figure out why they would do casting (like in casting actors for their shows) from a phone.


I spent too muchtime trying to figure out why they would do casting (like in casting actors for their shows) from a phone.


since the last time I checked (could be they’ve made progress since then):
in short it’s a lot of tiny little things that make my overall experience just annoying.


because it’s actually usable?


like Crash and Shakespeare in Love?


even github was not available for many people.


he is at least a very dumb person if he believes Trump sides against bigtech


do you know of alternative? I wanted to leave them because of this but found they most other options were not as close as good.


yes, but my question is specifically about ‘sources’. Saying “public trackers” is like asking how to get to a supermarket and answering “use the roads”. Also a lot of public tracker sites do not have a API readily availble, hence my question.
In the end I learned about prowlarr and jackett, which is the piece I was missing.


Thank you. I’ll give it a try


honestly. why did you even bother writing this answer? if you think my question is dumb just ignore it.


that’s the structure of a bluray disk. It includes all that the player needs to play it (e.g. menus, chapters, etc). The STREAM folder contains the actual video, probably in a .m2ts file (you can convert it to mkv using ffmpeg or similar tools)
it’s been a while since Adobe moved from standalone projects to what they call “content supply chain” they have no interest in competing at individual product level. if you only need photoshop, there are tons of better alternatives. they only become irreplaceable if you are in the enterprise level and need things like collaboration, project management, cloud storage, auditing, governance, etc (ie. creative cloud + workfront + their AEM DAM offering).
I do consulting in Adobe products and every year their products are shittier but they still are indispensible due to inertia and integrated ecosystem