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<head> | |
<meta property="og:image" content="GifToEmbedURL"> # Change the content to the link of a gif of your choice, which will be shown as the embed. | |
<meta property="og:type" content="video.other"> | |
<meta property="og:video:url" content="VideoToEmbedURL"> # Change the content to the link of a video of your choice. Will work with videos over 50 MB, and even unsupported codecs such as AV1! | |
<meta property="og:video:width" content="1920"> # Set this to the video's width and height, not required, but will show the video as intended if the aspect ratio and size is correct. | |
<meta property="og:video:height" content="1080"> | |
</head> |
As this is not an official way of installing Arc, if you encounter any issues do NOT report them to the developers, they did not intend for people to be running Arc on Windows 10.
This guide is a bit more manual since I wanted to respect the developers' wishes and not directly link any downloads to the beta of Arc.
I don't know how this will work with updates, you may just need to redo the process to update it, but I'm not sure
- Install this font: https://aka.ms/SegoeFluentIcons (this fixes the icons since Windows 10 doesn't have this font installed by default)
- Download the Arc appinstaller and open it in notepad/some other text editor
- Copy everything inside and paste it into this website: https://codebeautify.org/xmlviewer (this is optional, but it makes reading and copying from the file easier)
- Find the
mainpackage
@Uri
, it should end inArc.x64.msix
, and open that in a new tab. It should download that msix file.
// | |
// ViewController.swift | |
// Journal-Calendar-Demo | |
// | |
// Created by Seb Vidal on 30/04/2024. | |
// | |
import UIKit | |
class ViewController: UIViewController { |
docker system prune | |
docker container prune | |
docker rm -f `docker ps -a -q` | |
docker image prune | |
docker rmi $(docker images -a -q) | |
docker volume prune | |
docker network prune |
I'm a user of mwan3 and contribute to its development in a small way by mainly providing feedback with my multi WAN setup and maintaining the beast of it's documentation on the OpenWrt wiki (feedback and contributors welcome).
This setup ultimately requires the use of a NAT6 firewall script. NAT6 is currently broke with fw3 and LuCI, so this is an important helper script to workaround this current limitation.
The NAT6 configuration requirements are explained in more detail on the OpenWrt wiki.
This gist is aims to document my configuration for others.
@echo off | |
title Microsoft Office 2019 versions are supported!&cls&echo | |
============================================================================&echo | |
#Project: Activating Microsoft software products for FREE without software&echo | |
============================================================================&echo.&echo | |
#Supported products:&echo - Microsoft Office Standard 2019&echo - Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2019&echo.&echo.&(if exist | |
"%ProgramFiles%\Microsoft Office\Office16\ospp.vbs" cd /d "%ProgramFiles%\Microsoft Office\Office16")&(if exist | |
"%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Microsoft Office\Office16\ospp.vbs" cd /d "%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Microsoft Office\Office16")&(for /f %%x in ('dir /b | |
..\root\Licenses16\ProPlus2019VL*.xrm-ms') do cscript ospp.vbs /inslic:"..\root\Licenses16\%%x" >nul)&(for /f %%x in ('dir /b | |
..\root\Licenses16\ProPlus2019VL*.xrm-ms') do cscript ospp.vbs /inslic:"..\root\Licenses16\%%x" >nul)&echo.&echo |
i386 : iPhone Simulator | |
x86_64 : iPhone Simulator | |
arm64 : iPhone Simulator | |
iPhone1,1 : iPhone | |
iPhone1,2 : iPhone 3G | |
iPhone2,1 : iPhone 3GS | |
iPhone3,1 : iPhone 4 | |
iPhone3,2 : iPhone 4 GSM Rev A | |
iPhone3,3 : iPhone 4 CDMA | |
iPhone4,1 : iPhone 4S |
evdev:input:b*v0B05p193Ee0111* | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_10081=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_10082=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70070=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70071=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70072=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70073=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70074=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70075=reserved | |
KEYBOARD_KEY_70076=reserved |
If you've built ffmpeg as instructed here on Linux and the ffmpeg binary is in your path, you can do fast HEVC encodes as shown below, using NVIDIA's NPP's libraries to vastly speed up the process.
Now, to do a simple NVENC encode in 1080p, (that will even work for Maxwell Gen 2 (GM200x) series), start with:
ffmpeg -i <inputfile> \
-filter:v hwupload_cuda,scale_npp=w=1920:h=1080:format=nv12:interp_algo=lanczos,hwdownload \
-c:v hevc_nvenc -profile main -preset slow -rc vbr_hq \