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[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 week ago (1 children)

They don't show the labels because the brand didn't pay. If you see a label with a brand on it they probably paid.

For a cooking show it's probably not going to be worth the time and effort to get a contract in place for every ingredient, so you only see it occasionally.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

To be fair, people are generally coming around to it and it's kind of on it's way to being a cult classic now. People say this about everything but it was actually ahead of its time in terms of its visual style and the way it deals with the serious elements within the wild cartoon visuals.

Weirdly, I kind of think Marvel movies like Guardians might have been the thing that tipped the scales. The breakneck editing is still way ahead of anything I've seen since though.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago

If that's the case then yeah, probably not the best option. They need their own hub and run on weird 433mhz band radios.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Ok, that makes sense. In general for switches I recommend the Caseta ones from Lutron. They also make a motion sensor, which would mean you wouldn't need a hub if you don't already have one. Downside is they're much more expensive than other switches, upside is they work so much better it's worth the price difference.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

Do you need more automation than regular 3 way motion switches you can get at the hardware store? They're relatively cheap and cover a surprising amount of needs without having to rely on anything other than the switch.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

From a technical level you should use something lossless in this situation, but it really quickly becomes impractical. Actually lossless 1080p60 is going to be something like 500mbps, so if you're playing for an hour I hope you have a spare 2tb drive laying around. The artifacts in really high bitrate compressed video are so minimal that they basically don't matter. Often codecs do noise removal first thing so whatever minor artifacts still exist will get smeared over by that anyway.

Also when you are testing make sure there's some movement in the video. AV1 especially has modes for presentations and things that basically make a PowerPoint, so sizes might be unrealistic if you're just recording your desktop. I don't think that gets enabled in handbrake but it's been a while since I looked.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

If you're seeing any artifacts in the original video, you probably need to re-record in a higher bitrate. It needs to look identical to uncompressed. Your later encodes will be trying to encode all the artifacts in the original video, which could be why the file sizes keep getting bigger - you're giving it noisier video than the original.

50mbps for recording as an intermediate like that is well within the realm of normal. You can try having obs record in 264 with a quality setting instead of a bitrate setting, which can save space when things are more static - something like cq 6 or lower can do pretty well.

Unfortunately, yeah finding the sweet spot does take forever. One thing I would recommend is once you have an idea where you want to land, try a few much longer videos and see what the differences are. Slower paced sections might compress much better than the fast action stuff in one codec or another. Again it's all kind of a balancing act on where you want to be.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

In the third screenshot, preset is on 7, change that to 4. That's the speed setting - 7 is trying to do it in close to real time, 4 will take much longer but be much more efficient.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

Can you post a screenshot of your Handbrake settings? You should definitely be getting better efficiency than that.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 weeks ago (9 children)

Because it's just for personal archival, I would recommend recording in super high bitrate 264 or 265 depending on what your card can do in real time, then compressing that file later using either av1 or 265, depending on which works better for the content.

If you're playing in 1440p165, then you should record that to start although if it's an option I would play and record at 1080p120. 1440 is a bit of an odd duck resolution that some stuff doesn't really like, but it's getting better all the time so it's not a huge deal. More important is 120fps because if you decide to go down to 60 or even 30fps they split evenly, which is important since it means the extra frames just get thrown out. There's no 82.5 frame so it either has to blend two together or pick one that's at the wrong time, and neither looks good.

Record in OBS using like, 25-40mbps in whatever your graphics card can do realtime, with all the audio tracks in something lossless like FLAC. High enough it might as well be uncompressed.

Once you have your gameplay recording from OBS, use either Handbrake or FFMPEG to convert it to your long term storage format. Since this is such a big project I would make some samples using cheats to get an idea what the bullet-hell-iest parts will look like, then try a few different handbrake or ffmpeg settings, and see what gives you the tradeoff of file size and quality that you like. It'll also give you a ballpark idea about how much long term storage you'll need.

Non-realtime encoding like ffmpeg and Handbrake is much more efficient than realtime done by your graphics card, like on the order of like half the file size for the same quality - that's why you want the two step process. It also allows you to play in 120fps for that responsiveness, but watch at 60 or even 30fps to save some file size.

When you set up handbrake, you'll have a few settings to play with and make samples from - encoder, quality level, speed, fps, and rescaling.

Encoder is probably the most important. Use either x265 or SVT-AV1. In my experience, they're close in terms of efficiency, but AV1 pulls ahead in certain situations. AV1 is more efficient about large static sections and when it breaks up it just looks blurry. 265 is better at retaining texture, but when it fails its gross digital blocks. 265 is faster than AV1, but when you push AV1 and it takes 1000 years it does a better job. Basically, run a lot of tests and then decide.

Scaling is where you go from 1440 to 1080 and is probably the least important for file size. I honestly wouldn't bother with it, but you can try. Like I said, technically some TVs don't like 1440, and everything supports 1080, but I wouldn't worry about it too much.

FPS I have the least experience with. My guess is that going do something lower is going to save you some size, but its really going to depend on the codec and the content.

Quality level is the most important setting - just set it to what you think is watchable. It doesn't use a bitrate, it adjusts the bitrate to get a constant quality level, so it's much more efficient. It's important to note that they aren't exactly the same at every speed setting, so be careful.

Lastly is the speed. 265 goes from very fast to very slow, and AV1 goes from 9 (fast) to 0 (stupid slow). Personally I use slow or very slow for 265 and about 4 for AV1, but if you have a lot of video to crunch through you might want to crank that up a bit.

For audio use OPUS. 96 is the default "bitrate" and I find it to be enough. Some players don't like it but if you're thinking about using AV1, anything that would support AV1 supports opus.

The main thing will just be doing a bunch of video encode samples and finding the settings and workflow that's right for you.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago

Something actually changed and now there's a carry-on not included tier ticket. I wrote more in my other comment in the thread.

 

So, this will probably be possible when the link handler is implemented, but it would be really handy to be able to switch what account you are viewing a post with. I'm guessing it would be possible to share the post to the link handler and then there would be an account selector, but it would be nice if there was a slightly less roundabout way to do it.

I'm on a smaller instance and browse all from the anonymous Lemmy.World account sometimes, but when I find a post from community that I'd like to subscribe to I have to copy and edit the post link to get the community link to search with. If anyone knows an easier way I'd love to know it.

 

So, I've found that there are a lot of ways to backup a server and anything on it, but I'm somewhat at a loss for what to use to backup everything else to that server.

For most stuff I personally can grab the files I need and back them up using a simple SMB share or rsync or whatever, but for my SO or anyone else who wants to back up is going to have a hard time. That doesn't even cover phones - which you would want to back up fairly regularly since, you know, they get dropped. Sure, I personally can hook up tailscale and split tunnel it, and then set up sync on certain folders, but nobody else I know is going to be able to.

In a perfect world there would be a backup app that had its own little wireguard tunnel built in that could run all the traffic from wherever to my server, and would easy to set up on Android and Windows, but I don't think that exists. So what does everyone use that does exist?

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