Best way I know of is to share them to Grayjay, and then add it to Grayjay one by one. I don't think there's a way of exporting them quicker than that.
amanneedsamaid
This is what I use (with zsh):
yt-audio() {
yt-dlp --no-playlist -f 'ba' -x --audio-format mp3 $1
}
yt-audio-playlist() {
yt-dlp -f 'ba' -x --audio-format mp3 $1
}
It takes the best quality available and downloads it to mp3.
If you mean disable it entirely, I don't get that warning at alli
I do exactly this for downloading music, I aliased my preferred options to 'yt-audio'
I think any math teacher who sees you tattooed a formula on yourself and doesn't let you look at it is an absolute dickhead. (Assuming the dickhead won't allow formula sheets)
And the hardware is great IMO. Pixel 6 was my first Pixel after only buying iPhones, and I swear the thing survives so much abuse. (Although I heard the 6 in particular had many issues, I love mine)
Seems to me (and that doesn't mean much) to be the most secure / well updated option. GrapheneOS on a Pixel runs GREAT for me, I honestly expected a buggy experience from a custom ROM.
Also, my grandmother could install it (this was especially enticing, I was worried about having to flash an OS, didn't want to brick a phone).
You get a lot of flexibility when it comes to installing Google Play Services. What I do is install any app that needs gplay services to a separate user profile with them installed.
I honestly don't have any cons, I'm completely satisfied with it, I can't see myself switching back to an iOS device or trying stock Android.
I can think of two cons, although they don't bother me (not sure if this applies to every ROM available):
You miss out on some features / apps that come with stock android, such as AI features.
AOSP apps are installed out of the box, but aren't wonderful for day-to-day use IMO. I recommend Fossify and You Apps
Pixel with GrapheneOS for me.
+1, displaying in a Emacs buffer solves any issues I could have. If you're already 'in' Emacs, this will be more frictionless than shell scripts around man
My fault entirely. I guess my argument would be that those other corporations also shouldn't be creating password managers, at least 'within their ecosystem'.
I believe a password database should preferably be stored locally, and at least in a cloud that is completely separate from your essential account(s) (i.e Proton, Google, Microsoft accounts, etc.) I have no doubt Proton's implementation is secure, but I think the principle of using it is not ideal.
Unless Proton OS is a consideration, I dont think a browser is a natural progression. There are plenty of private browser options already being developed (and I think the proton extensions cover most conveniences). The only way I'd see a Proton browser as a positive thing is if they went all in on ladybird or some other completely independent browser engine.
As far as I can tell, I can rotate the feed screens to landscape AND rotates if I turn my phone (Pixel 6) ๐.
Might've changed in the last week or something, check if you need an update!