The Package Management>Upgrades display doesn't dim out a package that was installed as a dependency, which is not a serious problem but a bit clunky: the user can update a package and the display is updated with no actual package update.
If it's easy to detect which packages were installed...
BH's results are ~3MB/s. If videos are being decrypted (Humax -> USB storage), the system wouldn't need to beat an average 0.5MB/s to deliver OTA HD content in real time, so anything better than that is just luck, or engineering margin.
Settings entered into boot-settings will be restored. If the box is networked via WiFi and doesn't reconnect, try wireless-helper (report results in the relevant thread). auto-schedule-restore may restore your last saved schedule and favourites list, or select a good backup from Scheduled...
Yes, I've seen this too (HD). The restore needs to check for some other thing, such as there being some "tuned" channels, as well as there being no scheduled events. We should have thought of that ... though I haven't actually checked that, and imagine the unlikelihood of a test case.
YT has changed the available formats. Possibly yt-dl format selection is now finding DASH formats instead of unfragmented formats and so causing this problem.
Try --external-downloader ffmpeg. The WgetFD external downloader is marked as supporting the default protocols 'http', 'https', 'ftp'...
First try getting any web resource, maybe some user avatar:
# wget --version
GNU Wget 1.20.3 built on linux-gnu.
-cares +digest -gpgme +https +ipv6 -iri +large-file -metalink -nls
+ntlm +opie -psl +ssl/openssl
Wgetrc:
/mod/etc/wgetrc (system)
Compile:
mipsel-linux-gcc -std=gnu99...
You won't see the output properly unless you run the command at a terminal prompt. yt-dl treats anything that looks like a YT video ID as the equivalent YT URL. cd to the directory where the video should be saved beforehand.
Possibly your home network is IPv6-aware and the downloader is getting...
To diagnose this, it'll be necessary to run the yt-dl command directly. On my laptop (if you have a big lap), this command ran OK after a run in which a corrupt file was generated: as YT is now giving 403 on DASH segments more often we should now make --abort-on-unavailable-fragment the default...
In fact the name shown in the Media>Storage display does seem to come from the USB device.
My test platform is a box with a USB hub plugged into its (one, HD Fox-T2) USB socket. Below, the manufacturer/product are listed from the /sys/class/usb_device/ tree (in sysfs, a virtual filesystem that...
I guess Portable is the name of the USB device(s).
Where do these names appear? In Settings>System>Data Storage, my single attached USB-SATA drive is shown by its volume label; in Media>Whatever>Storage, the icons show USB and Network.
The output of /mod/sbin/blkid might be interesting...
You may as well use a key of all 0s, which is also more efficient to decrypt. Unless you actually want to have a hard-to-guess key, or when preparing for resale, there's no reason to use the native key.
You can save all the keys used in your setup (different machines at different times) and...
If the filesystem is still readable it would be good to save any precious content before proceeding.
I couldn't see any sign in the Debian e2fsprogs changelog that Ted had implemented the check mentioned in the linked bug report, so it's entirely possible that the problem persists in the...
Something like that but more like this. That error message looks like an old version (older than the recent Beta update). Now, instead of throttling, you get a 403 Forbidden.
The Package Management>Upgrades display doesn't dim out a package that was installed as a dependency, which is not a serious problem but a bit clunky: the user can update a package and the display is updated with no actual package update.
If it's easy to detect which packages were installed...
BH's results are ~3MB/s. If videos are being decrypted (Humax -> USB storage), the system wouldn't need to beat an average 0.5MB/s to deliver OTA HD content in real time, so anything better than that is just luck, or engineering margin.
Settings entered into boot-settings will be restored. If the box is networked via WiFi and doesn't reconnect, try wireless-helper (report results in the relevant thread). auto-schedule-restore may restore your last saved schedule and favourites list, or select a good backup from Scheduled...
Yes, I've seen this too (HD). The restore needs to check for some other thing, such as there being some "tuned" channels, as well as there being no scheduled events. We should have thought of that ... though I haven't actually checked that, and imagine the unlikelihood of a test case.
YT has changed the available formats. Possibly yt-dl format selection is now finding DASH formats instead of unfragmented formats and so causing this problem.
Try --external-downloader ffmpeg. The WgetFD external downloader is marked as supporting the default protocols 'http', 'https', 'ftp'...
First try getting any web resource, maybe some user avatar:
# wget --version
GNU Wget 1.20.3 built on linux-gnu.
-cares +digest -gpgme +https +ipv6 -iri +large-file -metalink -nls
+ntlm +opie -psl +ssl/openssl
Wgetrc:
/mod/etc/wgetrc (system)
Compile:
mipsel-linux-gcc -std=gnu99...
You won't see the output properly unless you run the command at a terminal prompt. yt-dl treats anything that looks like a YT video ID as the equivalent YT URL. cd to the directory where the video should be saved beforehand.
Possibly your home network is IPv6-aware and the downloader is getting...
To diagnose this, it'll be necessary to run the yt-dl command directly. On my laptop (if you have a big lap), this command ran OK after a run in which a corrupt file was generated: as YT is now giving 403 on DASH segments more often we should now make --abort-on-unavailable-fragment the default...
In fact the name shown in the Media>Storage display does seem to come from the USB device.
My test platform is a box with a USB hub plugged into its (one, HD Fox-T2) USB socket. Below, the manufacturer/product are listed from the /sys/class/usb_device/ tree (in sysfs, a virtual filesystem that...
I guess Portable is the name of the USB device(s).
Where do these names appear? In Settings>System>Data Storage, my single attached USB-SATA drive is shown by its volume label; in Media>Whatever>Storage, the icons show USB and Network.
The output of /mod/sbin/blkid might be interesting...
You may as well use a key of all 0s, which is also more efficient to decrypt. Unless you actually want to have a hard-to-guess key, or when preparing for resale, there's no reason to use the native key.
You can save all the keys used in your setup (different machines at different times) and...
If the filesystem is still readable it would be good to save any precious content before proceeding.
I couldn't see any sign in the Debian e2fsprogs changelog that Ted had implemented the check mentioned in the linked bug report, so it's entirely possible that the problem persists in the...
Something like that but more like this. That error message looks like an old version (older than the recent Beta update). Now, instead of throttling, you get a 403 Forbidden.
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