This commit is contained in:
Francesco Mecca 2022-05-23 17:31:23 +01:00
parent aada428401
commit 3578373947
9 changed files with 1167 additions and 11 deletions

View File

@ -180,9 +180,498 @@ download è generalmente il canale di distribuzione usato dalle
community più ristrette, in particolare perchè permettono di
condividere i costi.
** Bittorrent
? tracker privati?
? software?
? critica ai tracker privati
Il protocollo bittorrent, spesso abbreviato semplicemente come
torrent, è probabilmente il protocollo più importante nella scena
pirata, soprattutto nella fascia mainstream. I vari client torrent
negli anni hanno occupato una percentuale imponente di tutto il
traffico mondiale.
Il web è pieno di articolo molto approfonditi sul protocollo,
wikipedia è un buon punto di partenza.
*** Tracker privati
I tracker privati dal punto di vista tecnico offrono lo stesso set di
funzionalità di un tracker pubblico ma la community generalmente ha
regole moltro stringenti. Alcuni tracker, come rutracker o nyaa, sono
considerati semi-privati perchè permettono a qualsiasi utente di
registrarsi. I tracker privati più esclusivi invece richiedono
un'invito o il superamento di un'inteview tramite IRC.
In queste community, di solito c'è un'ampia serie di regole che
riguardano la quantità e il tipo di contenuti che si possono
scaricare, le precauzioni che si devono prendere quando si accede al
sito, il numero di client che si possono utilizzare, etc. Tali regole
e contenuti variano da tracker a tracker e vanno da quelle piuttosto
liberali e poco applicate a quelle ultra-paranoiche e autistiche. I
vantaggi dei tracker privati includono:
- Velocità: più grande lo swarm, più veloce è il download. I tracker
privati incoraggiano i loro membri a rimanere in seed i torrent il più a
lungo possibile, aumentando così le possibilità che un torrent abbia
uno swarm sano più a lungo. Inoltre molti membri usano delle
seedbox o delle VPS con velocità molto elevate e peering eccellente.
- Retention: i tracker privati di solito
applicano regole che incoraggiano il seeding a lungo termine. I
contenuti più oscuri rimangono sani per molto più tempo che sui
tracker pubblici e generalisti.
- Selezione: alcuni contenuti non sono disponibili su nessun sito
pubblico e si trovano solo su tracker privati. A volte non è nemmeno
possibile acquistarli legalmente, ironia della sorte. Questo succede
spesso con delle release particolari ottenute da sorgenti non
destinati alla vendita. Ci sono specifici tracker che si occupano
solamente di contenuti oscuri e rari, assicurando che non vadano
persi da internet.
- Controllo di qualità: i tracker privati hanno regole rigorose sul
formato, la qualità e l'organizzazione dei contenuti. I tracker
musicali assicurano che non si ricevano orribili transcoding a
92kbps; i tracker cinematografici assicurano che si ricevano solo
buone codifiche, i tracker di ebook assicurano che si riceva la
qualità di vendita al dettaglio, etc. I membri e lo staff esaminano
e approvano ogni torrent. Le regole di trumping e la rimozione dei
duplicati assicurano che si ottenga una sola fonte approvata dalla
comunità per un contenuto e un formato specifici. In aggiunta a
questo i tracker privati curano in ogni dettaglio la grafica e le
funzionalità del sito al fine di offire la migliore esperienza
possibile per la ricerca e scoperta di contenuti.
- Sicurezza: la maggior parte dei tracker privati sono così di nicchia
da non essere conosciuti o considerati da nessuno. I copyright troll
preferiscono concentrarsi su enormi siti pubblici, dove è facile
pescare i peer, piuttosto che su piccole comunità difficili da
raggiungere. Da un punto di vista monetario, è più conveniente
impedire a 10.000 occasionali di scaricare due torrent che impedire
a due autistici di scaricare 10.000 torrent. Ci sono però alcune
avvertenze: i troll del copyright perseguiranno in modo aggressivo
la fonte dei media pre-release trapelati, come gli screeners. Di
conseguenza, molti tracker privati non ammettono questi contenuti.
Fortunatamente gli screeners trapelati sono in genere molto popolari
e si trovano comunque facilmente sui tracker pubblici. I grandi
gruppi di pirateria prolifici, come la SCENE o i gruppi di
distribuzione ben noti, sono bersagli enormi per i copyright troll.
Ricorda sempre che a causa della natura più sociale che tecnica dei
tracker privati, spesso lo staff richiede la registrazione di un
account utilizzando il proprio indirizzo IP. Per tenere traccia degli
utenti vietati, delle regioni vietate e così via, la maggior parte dei
tracker privati registra tutto ciò che viene fatto sul tracker e
conserva questi dati per sempre. I tracker privati sono tutti
intrinsecamente illegali e gli utenti si stanno affidando a una
persona o a un gruppo sconosciuto. Non si può sapere se il personale
ha intenzioni nefaste. Non si sa quanto siano competenti in materia di
sicurezza informatica; nel corso degli anni ci sono stati numerosi
casi di breaching dei tracker a causa di sviluppatori incompetenti.
Molti vecchi tracker memorizzano la vostra password in chiaro, o non
hanno la 2FA, non proteggono correttamente i loro siti o una serie di
altre cose.
Per saperne di più sui tracker privati, ed in particolari ottenere i
primi indirizzi: https://wiki.installgentoo.com/wiki/Private_trackers
**** La cabala e la merda
Alcuni tracker sono la cabala, ovvero i tracker migliori, più longevi
e più rinomati della comunità. Sono oggettivamente i migliori nelle
rispettive categorie. Avere un battibecco con lo staff della cabala
significa venir permabannati da tutti i tracker della cabala e da
tutti i tracker disposti a collaborare con la cabala.
Alcuni tracker minori sono assoggettati alla cabala; chi viene bannato
dalla cabala, viene bannato anche da questi. D'altra parte, un buon
ratio o behaviour su uno di questi tracker sarà preso in
considerazione per la candidatura ad un altro tracker soggetto alla
cabala. Tuttavia, a causa del loro contenuto di nicchia o di qualità
inferiore, questi tracker non ottengono la stessa esposizione della
cabala.
Vi sono anche sono tracker gestiti da personale noto per pratiche di
merda come lo scambio di account, il DDoS di altri siti,
l'incoraggiamento di pay2leech, la vendita di account o spazi
pubblicitari, la memorizzazione di password in
chiaro. I peggiori nemici della cabala, quindi non aspettatevi che il
ratio su uno di questi siti venga preso in considerazione sui tracker
della cabala. Questo non significa che non possano avere buoni
contenuti o un buon sito e per questo valga valere la pena iscriversi.
Basta non dare loro soldi, per nessun motivo.
Vi sono alcuni tracker e communities che non hanno lo sbatti di fare
un'eccessiva moderazione nè la hubris per sentirsi un club super
esclusivo e sono noti per non collaborare
con la cabala. Sono comunque tracker legit e spesso semi privati.
Rutracker, pornolab e nyaa sono i più importanti fra questi.
*** How to get into private trackers (and survive)
Copiato da wiki.installgentoo. Questa sezione dovrebbe dare al lettore un'idea
della quantità di regole e pratiche alla base delle communities dei
tracker privati. Oltre a questo, si può argomentare che i tracker più
stringenti sono essenzialmente in opposizione ad uno degli elementi
cardini della pirateria, ovvero l'accesso libero ed indiscriminato dei
contenuti. Piuttosto che pensare al proprio pene digitale e
all'opinione che dei neckbeard sconosciuti hanno di te è probabilmente
più sano concentrarsi sui tracker semi privati che offrono comunque il
99% dei contenuti alla migliore qualità. Inoltre è opportuno fare
sempre una riflessione su come si sta contribuendo alla scena.
The first thing you need to ask yourself is whether your needs are
satisfied by what you currently have at your disposal (DHT/public
trackers (TPB and KAT), DDL, newsgroups, streaming, Soulseek, Tribler,
DC++, Kad/eDonkey, sneakernet...among other things), because private
trackers may not be actually worth your time, depending on what you
want. Joining private trackers isn't hard, but it takes time. Do you
just want that one specific file you've been searching in vain for
weeks? If so, you'd be better off asking someone on /r/ to snatch it
for you and call it a day. Do you want to build a comprehensive
library with consistent and superior quality such as good encodes,
proper music tagging, retail ebooks? Then you should try to join one
of the specialized trackers. Do you live in a copyright-cucked
shithole and are afraid to get raped by the MPAA/RIAA and associates,
but care little about music or HD? Then a general tracker should suit
you. Depending on your goals, whether they are long-term and
short-term and whether they are currently satisfied, the amount of
time you will have to invest will vary.
- Open-signup trackers: This is the easiest step. All trackers have to
start small and build up a decent userbase before they can afford to
limit entry, and thus some trackers are open to signup for a time.
Numerous websites keep track of these (opentrackers.org,
opentrackers.net, btracs.com, /r/OpenSignups), unless you're looking
for something specific, just go to rutracker (rutracker.org). Yes,
it's entirely in Russian, but who cares? All registration forms look
the same, and you weren't going to post in the forums anyway, right?
(More on that later). Rutracker is really nice because it's
comprehensive, well-seeded and has high standards despite having
very few ratio restrictions. In fact, 99% of the needs of most users
are met there. If you are looking for porn, it is recommended to
open pornolab (pornolab.net). Yes, it's in Russian too. Here's a
guide from a Russian speaker to rutracker.
- Pay2Pirate: Some trackers will invite you for a fee. The idea is to
prevent potential cheaters from abusing the system (in ways defined
at the discretion of the staff) since any fuck-up would cost them
their account, and thus their money. Generally pay2pirate trackers
are considered low tier, since they are run for-profit and several,
notably IPT, have a history of shitty behaviour. There are *NO*
trackers worth paying to join, at all. Almost without exception they
can be joined for free with easy to obtain user invites. The content
that paid trackers offer is rarely if ever better than what is
offered by the good public trackers.
- Application: Some trackers have a special page with an application
form in one way or another. Their goal is to keep a moderate influx
of new members they can control by assessing your willingness to
join and what you have to offer. Different trackers have different
requirements: some will require proof of good ratio on other
trackers, some will only require that you show genuine interest and
good will in your application form even if you are new to the
tracker scene. Some mostly care about what material you have to
offer to the site. Try to be sincere, honest, lengthy and don't
forget to provide an email address so they can notify you of their
response.
- Interview: A few trackers have an interview system; it means that
you are going to join an IRC channel and answer questions to their
staff. It's mostly a way to control members' origin as almost all of
them will ask that you join from your home connection.
+ Redacted interview: READ THIS GUIDE FOR REDACTED.CH and THIS ONE
TOO before interviewing. Generally, the best way to get into good
trackers. The interview is extensive and similar to what.cd
(easier because the spectral analysis section appears to have
been toned down). You can fail if you don't take this seriously.
Currently, the most reputed tracker known to maintain an
interview system (essentially the new what.cd)
+ Myanonamouse interview: This is more of a chat, questions are
mostly about the rules, you will not pass or fail so there is no
need to worry.
+ Oppaitime: more of a chat, and questions are mostly about the rules.
+ Bakabt interview: More of a 3-minute chat about whether or not
you understand the rules.
- Invite forums: Once you've established a good standing on one of the
aforementioned trackers you've hopefully managed to get in, you will
be able to move on to more restrictive ones. Most top trackers
require new users to have a past of good standing (i.e. Power User
or Elite user class) such as one that can be shown on a tracker
whose staff they trust - the tracker scene is a small world, and
tracker staff often cooperate (or fight) with each other. As such,
there are recruitment threads on various trackers so they can
exchange good-standing users for the benefit of all.
- Super Exclusive Sekrit Klub: Once you've made it to the big ones,
the rest is up to you - you may try to join some of the ultra-closed
trackers such as EXIGO or HDBits but at this point your needs should
be pretty much covered unless you are looking for something really
specific or just doing it for epeen.
Generally speaking open signup trackers will not offer you a pathway
into more desirable trackers. Some trackers have application signups
and you can progress from there, but you'll be taking months if not
years longer to climb the pyramid if you do this. It's even harder to
remain /pure/ as well. The standard method of progressing is to join
RED, regardless of your feelings on a music tracker. You can join via
an IRC interview and it offers the best invite forum for new users.
The RED interview is conducted like an online exam, they ask you to
close everything except for IRC and then send thema screenshot of your
desktop. You aren't supposed to look at the prep material. They
monitor the prep website and if your IP address shows up connecting to
it they'll stop the interview and ask you to admit to cheating. If you
fess up you can try again the next day. If you lie they'll permaban
you, this is like a cabal ban as well so it can make life much harder
for you. What you can do is cheat by saving the prep as a pdf. it's
all fairly simple stuff to remember anyway and you'll need to know it
if when you start uploading anyway.
Next up is reaching the elite userclass to unlock the invite forums.
You actually get access at power user, but better trackers require you
to be elite before asking for an invite. Some will have even more
requirements, like a 6 month old account or more. The requirements for
elite userclass are 50 uploads, 3 months of account age and 100GB of
upload. The first two are easy, you can just upload shit from deezer,
or transcode FLAC's with no mp3 version. Getting 100GB is tricky.
Without a seedbox you'll likely get 1.00 ratio on your uploaded
torrents so it will take considerably more than 50 FLACs. You can seed
your initial uploads with a seedbox, which should get your better
returns. You could also race by autosnatching. RED is very competitive
however, so do this only if you have some experience using a seedbox
and configuring it correctly. pay2win is an option, you can usually
get 5-10GB filling a request for an album from bandcamp or similar.
Another option is to use the "premier" plugin for Deluge, which
manipulates the swarm and piece distribution to only upload a new
piece once everyone in the swarm has the previous one, which means you
upload 100% of the torrent to every single user. Proceed with extreme
caution though, this plugin is not specifically banned on RED, but if
autonstachers notice they are getting 0 upload from you they may add
you to a blackl-, sorry, BLOCKlist. If no one autosnatches from you at
all you will only ever get upload from permaseeding or requests.
**** What not to do
- Cheating: The cardinal rule of thumb is that most cheaters end up
with their account and their entire invite tree banned. Beware of
any anon which recommends cheating. Cheating doesn't just mean using
some dodgy client to fake ratio. If you "seed" 1000 torrents and
throttle them all to 1kb/s in order to farm bonus points without
using up badnwidth you will probably be in trouble if anyone ever
notices. Any actions like this that are not in good faith will not
be looked upon kindly.
- Beg for invites: Autists on /ptg/ have taken it upon themselves to
report every single email they see in /ptg/ threads to various
tracker staff and spam crawlers (they've gone as far as combing the
archives for emails in past threads and reporting those too).
Tracker staff are known to lurk /ptg/ and will ban anyone they catch
sending an invite to an email posted there. If you accept an invite
you begged for, you will be found out and lose any chance of
acquiring a legitimate account. Especially watch out for PTP staff
as they will revoke invite privileges and ban you for the smallest
of transgressions (such as, but not limited to, accidentally posting
IP lists in screenshots, posting the email you use for trackers).
Tracker staff have been known to autistically pore over /mu/, /g/
and /ptg/ threads (archived and live) for the express purposes of
finding and banning inviters/ees.
- Trade for invites: Tracker staff really, really hate this. If you
are caught trading (and you eventually will be) they will go out of
their way to ban you, your entire invite tree and will cooperate
with other tracker's staff so as to disable as many of your accounts
on other trackers as they can. Don't go to tracker trading forums
such as torrent-invites and the like, even having an account there
(especially with the same username) may count as a red flag to some
staff. It is reported that sites such as What.CD formerly abused
bugs in the browser's web history to determine whether or not users
were visiting sites such as torrent-invites and to ban people based
on this activity. Site staff are also known to pose as invite
sellers to trap and ban naive users.
- Buy invites: You'll lose money along with the chances of getting in
legitimately. Some staff will be lenient if you ditch your seller
though, probably because they want to get at the source first.
Invites are usually free (and easy enough) to get from gateway
trackers so it's not even worth buying invites.
Generally speaking, you should avoid invites from random dudes on the
internet if you can; you most likely have no idea of their standing
and they could very well fuck up later, resulting in an entire treeban
and you getting banned through no fault of your own. It's unfair, it
sucks. Stick to official invites (interview, application, recruitment
threads) and no one will bother you.
- Posting on the forums: Every post you make on the forum is an
occasion of getting someone riled up, and that someone may very well
be staff. You're here for downloading and uploading stuff, not
chitchat. Don't use the forums.
- Talking to staff more than necessary: Same reason as above. Don't
give them any reason to ban you. If you rustle a staff member in any
way, causing them to ban you, the entire staff will rally behind
them even if they wouldn't have personally banned you themselves.
It's the mod's word against yours, you can never win.
- Being confrontational with staff: Simply assume they are always
right, even (and especially) when you point out that they are wrong.
In short, either keep a low profile or suck staff's dick, as with all sites.
**** Cabal is so hard to join, I just want some content. What do I do?
A brand new user is looking at potentially years before they get into
the desirable trackers such as PTP for movies and BTN for TV. These
trackers are not the sole sources of content however, they are merely
the most convenient since they have the largest archives. To get the
best coverage of content a new user should look to join a few decent
HD trackers, as well as a few general trackers. The more the merrier.
Staff don't appreciate people collecting trackers they will rarely
use. Fuck 'em. Join any tracker that you feel has interesting content
or will compliment your ability to find the content you are after.
Some decent and more importantly accessible HD trackers a new user
could join would be Blutopia, BeyondHD and UHDbits. Couple this with
IPT, or TorrentLeech as your general tracker to fill the gaps.
SecretCinema is an excellent tracker for people with a genuine
interest in obscure/arthouse/weird cinema, as it has an active
requests section with users filling from KG/PTP/TiK and so on. TVV
will supplement your general/HD trackers for older or obscure TV
content, if you can find an invite in the wild. Avistaz or ACM will
fill your asian media needs. Don't count out public trackers either.
RuTracker especially is a top general tracker despite being public.
BakaBT has IRC signups and it's old archive will fills the gaps of
obscure content you can't find on Nyaa. RED should be your first port
of call and is the top music tracker, so that's covered right away.
MaM is also arguably the best book tracker and has IRC signups as
well.
**** Getting acquainted with rules and maintaining your ratio
Okay, now we're going to assume you made it to a couple of private
trackers - if you haven't yet, please read above part (TL;DR: get into
an entry-level tracker; work you way up from there on either tracker's
PU forums; if that's too much bother for you, use rutracker/pornolab
and stop reading this). This is a guide intended to help those who
already made their first steps in the elitist, restricted and highly
autismal private tracker world. As you can see, things are quite
different here. Rules, ratio, buffer, seeding, userclasses... what the
fuck's all this? Things were much simpler on ThePirateBay where you
could just search, click and have your stuff right there, right?
And you know what? You're right. Most folks on /ptg/ and elsewhere
will tell you stories about how they did a kind gesture and invited a
friend of theirs (or even a fellow Anon) only to see them log on twice
into the site before never using it again, no matter how hard they
begged and how convincing they sounded. In all likelihood, these
people first logged on, their excitement faded when they saw that they
couldn't just start downloading everything before signing off, found
the rules too complicated, lost interest in the whole thing and
settled for more accessible alternatives (which are, again, not
necessarily bad, depending on what one wants). Since you're reading
this, It is assumed that you're not one of these people and that you
actually want to use the trackers you're on. Are they worth it? Well,
that's for you to find out. Before you decide, here's a few tips
that'll show you it's not that hard, if you can read that is. First
things first
- Read the rules. Seriously, do it. Tracker staff are autistic, you
get one account per lifetime and you don't want to start playing
cat-and-mouse games with the admins that early. Most tracker rules
are similar, and go on the lines of "Suck our dicks at all
occasions; don't leak invites or torrent files to public places;
don't trade or sell invites; don't be inactive" followed by
specifics on content rules (what you may upload) and ratio rules
(more on that later). Read all the details as there may be some
specifics on each tracker. Some have exclusive content that you
can't upload elsewhere; some prohibit the use of Tor or VPNs, or
even expressively forbid that you log on from anywhere else than
your home connection; and so on. Read it all so you don't get caught
unawares on some autistic peculiarity.
**** Ratio issues and tracker economy
Now let's assume you're familiar with the rules, how about you
download some shit? The only problem is that ratio thingy: surprise,
when you're done downloading something, no one ever downloads it back
from you, ever. That's because, unless you joined a low-tier tracker,
the seeder-to-leecher ratio is extremely high, with everyone
permaseeding everything while only leeching occasionally. This brings
us to our main point: tracker economy. Trackers can be roughly sorted
into three categories: those with no economy, those with a soft
economy, and those with a hard economy. Some of the most
forward-thinking trackers do away with ratio altogether, though
keeping seedpoints as the sole currency of their site. These are
neither soft or hard economies as the economic levers are created by
and adjusted solely at the discretion of the respective tracker.
- No economy: trackers with no economy are essentially ratioless.
Torrent retention is achieved by imposing seeding requirements or
individual ratio requirements ("you must seed with a 1:1 ratio OR
for 72 hours"), and people get an incentive for seeding by acquiring
bonus points that can be used for transcending userclasses. The most
prominent example of a ratioless tracker is BTN. You won't have any
problem there as long as you seed. A tracker being ratioless does
not give users leave to go on Hit n' Run rampages however. These
kinds of trackers will routinely keep tabs on users with low average
seedtimes how appear to be taking advantage of the economy.
- Soft economy: tracker with a soft economy use a ratio-based system
complemented by bonus points. These points are typically earned by
doing specific actions, the most common of which seeding for an X
amount of GBs, regardless of whether someone is actually downloading
it from you. Some trackers will reward you for uploading torrents,
idling on IRC or doing any kind of activity that contributes to the
tracker and the site as a whole. Most trackers have a soft economy,
from AHD to PTP, from MAM to bB or AB. Another kind of soft economy
is a ratio-based system with a large amount of freeleech torrents,
i.e. torrents whose download stats aren't counted but still earn you
upload credits. Such trackers include SHD, SCC or bB, AB and MAM
(again). You won't have many problems if you don't download
everything like a retard: just grab some freeleech or small
torrents, wait for your amount of bonus points to passively
increase, get upload credit when you can, use that upload credit to
download more, etc. The more you snatch, the more you seed, the more
points you earn, and eventually you'll have enough buffer to freely
download what you want.
- Hard economy: trackers with a hard economy are ratio-based but
provide little to no means of complementing one's upload amount,
like bonus points or freeleech sections. As a result, there's only a
limited amount of upload credit (which acts as tracker currency,
there are whole academic papers about it if you're into that kind of
stuff) in the whole tracker, and whatever credits you earn, someone
else has to spend. Getting upload credit is quite hard and you might
have to work on your ratio before being able to download whatever
you want without hindrance. On the other hand, since nearly everyone
is as tight on ratio as you are, everyone will be permaseeding
everything and torrents will have an excellent retention.
Trackers such as Bibliotik have a hard economy, and most struggles you
hear about getting one's ratio up will typically be on one of those
trackers. There are four main methods to get upload credit, on top of
permaseeding everything (which you should do in every tracker anyway -
you're doing that, right?): getting a seedbox, filling requests,
uploading your own content and jumping on popular torrent swarms
early.
+ Getting a seedbox: Basically pay2win but you might end up doing that if you don't want to bother too much and have money to spend. A surefire way to build a ratio on any tracker. They also alleviate the risk for users in countries who hand out DDMCA notices. Seedboxes can also server as media servers and much more.
+ Abusing the fuck out of freeleech: /ptg/ers like to preference the most active torrents especially staff picks and the top 10 most active on freeleech days.
+ Filling requests: Can be tricky as people will obviously request stuff they can't find elsewhere, so unless they're particularly inept at googling and people didn't catch on you won't have any luck. If you consider the request to be worth it and you like the content requested you could also buy it, a less cheesy pay2win since you still end up with the physical medium as opposed to imaginary points on a website that might get busted at any moment, on top of the warm fuzzy feeling that you made someone you don't know on the other side of the globe happy. Looking for requested material on other related trackers also works, though the process can be tedious.
+ Uploading your own content: A reliable way to get upload credit AND satisfy the usual userclass promotion requirements; however, unless you're operating from a seedbox or a very fast connection, you'll have a hard time achieving a ratio much above 1:1. That's because seedboxes usually snatch your stuff (especially if it's recent or matches certain tags) before taking priority to distribute it across the swarm, since the BitTorrent protocol favors peers with a faster upload speed. You'll still get upload of at least equal to your torrent size though, so you could survive on uploading stuff alone (also, if you keep uploading consistently good stuff, users will eventually "subscribe" to you and snatch everything you upload). On sites like Bibliotik uploading enough content makes the entire site freeleech. You might also be able to get extra bonus points for uploading content.
+ /pyramid/: And finally, jumping onto popular swarms (aka /pyramid/ on /ptg/) is a risky though exciting activity that rewards those who catch on early and get to upload to everyone, while those who joined in on a later date only get a fraction of the original seeders' credit, thus creating a pyramid scheme. Popular torrents include those about to become freeleech or the newest content from popular artists. /ptg/ regulars will often post about /pyramid/ tips, which means you could download from that torrent in the hope that it'll grow and eventually get you a ratio above 1. If you have a seedbox or any kind of dedicated server, automatic tools such as autodl-irrsi will snatch stuff based on relevant information (such as tags, year etc.), however you run the risk of downloading too much stuff you can't afford, even if some of it pays off. Use at your own discretion and beware, your upload speed and peering has an enormous impact on what ratio you will end up with.
- Other economy: economies that have no ratio requirements, but
maintain a semblance of order and structure by relying solely on
seedpoints, or bonus points, to function in a similar way to 'hard'
ratio-only trackers. Rewarding long term seeding while at the same
time disincentivizing pump-and-dump autosnatchers, seedpoints are
used in ways other than to simply download torrents depending on the
tracker. Voting on requests, ascending the user class ladder and
purchasing goodies in a bonus points store are a few ways that
seedpoints can be used. It is worth noting that many ratioless
trackers use points to purchase optional functionality. BTN is an
example of this. By changing the requirements for maintaining a
ratio to that of spending seedpoints to download a torrent is what
separates this category from the ratioless variety.
**** "Help, I've been cabal banned!"
I can just turn my router off and on again to get a new IP and start
over, r-right? Wrong. The private tracker community is small, so
unless you live near a large population center there's a real chance
you are the only person in your town or city using private trackers.
Which means it'll be obvious when staff cabal ban a rural Danish IP
and the next day a rural Danish IP is in the RED interview channel.
Consider what exchange you use and what IP range range your ISP uses.
As well as other data like the torrent client you have, browser
version and so on. If you ever do get banned and want to get back in
it's best to wait a few weeks, or better yet a few months. If you are
creating a new identity, remember, DO NOT check your old profile,
especially just after joining the tracker. Some paranoid sysops are
checking every new account's activity for weeks, even for months. DO
NOT act the same as you were before, especially if you were an active
user on forums and were uploading a lot. And obviously, don't use a
similar nickname. Also, don't use the password you used to have,
because they can see every users hashed password. Generally speaking,
just don't draw attention on you and stay /pure/ by not inviting
anyone nor donate to your trackers, ever (by the way, what kind of
cuck would you be, giving a donation to a tracker that cabaled you?).
If you are ever cabal banned consider all accounts linked to be
tainted, even if if you can still access them. If you plan on starting
over from the beginning you will have to burn all of the accounts that
could be traced to your cabal banned account, including the accounts
that you think are not part of the cabal (i.e morethantv,
torrentleech, iptorrents, foreign tracker and so on).
*** TODO
Source ? tracker privati? ? software? ? critica ai
tracker privati
** EDonkey
EDonkey è stato un protocollo molto importante per la scena italiana,
tantochè il suo client più famoso, EMule, ha una voce sulla
@ -244,7 +733,7 @@ XDCC permettono il download tramite script o comandi testuali da
server generalmente offerti da volontari. Dato che IRC ospita anche un
buon numero di community che si occupano di letteratura e in generale
media testuali, XDCC è molto comune anche per il download di ebook.
** USENET
** TODO USENET
** Soulseek
Soulseek è un network P2P che non supporta swarming e richiede un
server centrale nonostante i trasferimenti siano P2P. Il client è
@ -254,9 +743,10 @@ utenti che donano al progetto hanno priorità nelle code di download.
La community si concentra principalmente sulla condivisione di file
musicali. Nonostante tantissimi contenuti siano lossy, si inciampa
spesso in rarità e release molto esoteriche.
** Disruption delle reti di distribuzione
** TODO Disruption delle reti di distribuzione
**** Megaupload e vari (forse più giù)
*** Poisoning
*** Ghost leeching
*** Love letters
* Quando la pirateria incontra il capitalismo
** Cineblog?
@ -268,6 +758,14 @@ spesso in rarità e release molto esoteriche.
- NFO
** Formati ed acronimi
Non sempre il sorgente ha il migliore encoding
Il BDMV o il WEB è un encode della sorgente attuale e soffre spesso di
banding, noise, blocking, aliasing, etc. Le ragioni di questi
artefatti sono varie; per esempio molti sorgenti degli anime sono in
720p e il bluray viene upscaled a 1080p. L'encode può rendere ancora
più ovvi gli artefatti a causa della compressione; si può ovviare a
questo facendo preprocessing con dei filtri come Avisynth e
Vapoursynth prima dell'encoding.
| Acronimo | Spiegazione | Altro |
|-------------------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| CAM, HDCAM, DV | Bassa qualità | Bootleg, DV sta per Digital Video (camera) |
@ -290,6 +788,8 @@ spesso in rarità e release molto esoteriche.
| BDrip, BDR, BDmux, BDMV | Lossless rip da bluray, spesso con un remux | |
| BD25, BD50, BD5, BD9, BDISO, | Copia lossless da bluray | Spesso mantiene la stessa struttura binaria del disco originale |
| VU | Copia 1:1 dal formato originale | |
Vedi anche:
https://thewiki.moe/guides/quality
** Le parti del nome di una release Warez
Ci sono molti acronimi diversi che esistono nei nomi delle release, ma
tutti seguono un formato simile. Nell'esempio di un film, sarebbe *Title.Of.The.Movie.YEAR.Source.Codec-GROUP*
@ -348,5 +848,3 @@ untouched vengono distribuite come .iso, m2ts o una cartella (albero
dei file di un dump di un bluray). Ricordarsi che H264 e AVC, così
come H265 e HEVC sono codec video, mentre x264 e x265 sono
codificatori.
* TODO SPOSTA Tracker privati
Per maggiori informazioni: https://wiki.installgentoo.com/wiki/Private_trackers

View File

@ -1019,3 +1019,118 @@ back earlier this season, I hadn't even thought of it as a
possibility. His transformation from frantic and being on a mission to
find Kevin to very reserved and at ease with what was happening was
jarring.
** Six
Laurie to Jill before she goes in "I'm just hanging around" - Laurie
echoing Judas hanging himself. This episode was really really good.
Judas also betrayed Jesus of Nazareth with a kiss on the cheek. Just
like on the porch with Kevin. Judas also betrayed Jesus at the garden
of Gesthemane after three apostles fell asleep.
I think she did. She knows Jill and Tommy have each other. Of all the
characters on the show, they are the only two family members that
genuinely love each other and want to hang out together.
The silver is the lighter and also when she says "quit" she meant
life.
The nickname by Sr. to Laurie. EXPLAIN
** Finale
that was me this morning. can't find one sock, tear up my room looking
for its match. if all my socks were just gone, i'd think hmmm buy new
socks today
"I'm not trying to sell you anything, it just makes for a nicer story." - Damon Lindeloff, as he drops the mic
The finale was the most straightforward episode in the series.
There's no explanation the writers could give that I feel would be
satisfactory for the viewer. It needs to remain unexplained to hold
its power.
Why it wasn't staged.
Kevin and Nora were happy. It doesn't matter if her story was true or
not. Either she went to an alternate dimension and saw proof that her
children were okay or she told herself a story that helped her moved
on, like others were able to do after the departure. Kevin was
relieved from the burden of the awful things he said to Nora. Nora was
relieved from her self-imposed exile that was either due to shame from
not being the "bravest" and lying to everyone or from her belief that
no one would buy her story and that she didn't belong. The goat and
their sins left and they started again.
Nora the martyr? Christ carries his cross up a hill to sacrifice
(goat) himself for the sins (beads) of the world. Nora sacrifices
herself for the wellbeing of her kids.
Initially I had different thoughts on the goat, but now I think it's a
message that you can't run away from your own problems. Proverbs
5:22 - in the meshes of their own sin they will be held fast. Nora
freeing the goat symbolizes her taking responsibility for her own
decisions: forsaking everyone she knew, not attending her brother's
funeral, pushing Kevin away because of her own suffering, etc. She's
now ready to ask for forgiveness and acceptance from Kevin by
admitting that she knows her actions were wrong.
Such a great ending.
Each series ends with Nora talking to Kevin.
- S.1"Look what I found."
- S.2"You're home."
- S.3"I'm here."
Not to be dumb, but isn't The Book Of first and foremost an allusion
to the bible and how these stories are probably not true in the
factual sense, but telling A truth?
I rewatched the finale last night because I hadnt truly paid
attention to Nora as shes telling Kevin her story. Nora mentions
repeatedly in this one episode alone that she doesnt lie or shes not
a liar (when shes being recorded just prior to being transported) and
again when shes dancing with Kevin at the wedding she tells him “I
cant do this because it not the truth” (his story about how he found
her). Its true she does lie throughout the series to conceal things
shes doing, but eventually she does admit to Kevin what shes really
been doing. So she does lie but she also exposes her truth. So I dont
believe shes lying to Kevin when she tells him her story. I believe
she really went there, only in the way that Kevin went to the other
place (the hotel). I believe Nora panicked at the last minute as the
capsule was filling up with liquid, she yelled stop and began to
drown. By the time the physicists were able to pull her out Nora may
have died medically and needed to be resuscitated. Thats when she
traveled to see her family, just like Kevin when he drowned. The
episode itself is called “The Book of Nora”, which I take as meaning
she experienced what Kevin experienced near-death. I dont think she
ever believed anyone would believe her story, but thats exactly why
only Kevin would.
I wasn't on board with the: 'Nora goes to some alternate reality via
the radiation machine' theory until I realized 119 testimonials is
significant. If Mark Lyn Baker is #120, Nora would be #121. This
corresponds with Nora's S1 discussion about question #121 on the
benefits questionnaire: "Do you believe your loved one is in a better
place".
I've been trying to keep my eyes out for 121. I noticed it after
rewatching season 1 and 2 recently. It is also in s2 ep1 when Michael
was selling water to the tourists in Jarden. He was at table 121. Good
catch!
** Theory
I know this sounds like one of those shitty fan theories like ________ was dead all along/is in purgatory or whatever but I've thought about this since Saturday after I showed it to my lady and I think there is enough supporting evidence in the show.
So we know that when Kevin dies he goes to this place that serves as some thematic journey in order for him to deal whatever part of him is keeping him from moving on from embracing his loved ones and being happy. The entire second season revolves around him feeling disconnected from his new life because he can't let go of his old one, just as the third season is about Nora doing the exact same thing, but instead of Patti she's haunted by the memory of her family and just like Kevin she decides to kill herself in order to deal with her past for good but instead of getting drugged she gets irradiated.
If you listen to the story Nora tells it sounds as believable as Kevin being and international assassin or the president, I know what some of you are thinking "But u/OpenUpYerMurderEyes, Kevin had to assume sort of persona in order to go on his journey, Nora is just herself, how can it take place in the same place?" to which I offer two answers.
A) Kevin's problem has always been his inability to feel like he belonged after the departure. His dad went crazy so he took his place as the chief of police despite the fact that his officers are often suspicious of his abilities (the guy who looks for Dean questions his sanity, the dude who contacts the ATF after Gladys dies goes over the chain of command) after Laurie joined the GR he became a single father and is so bad at communicating and being emotionally available he doesn't hug his daughter, who is suffering just as much as he is, untill the final episode of season 1. Nora LOVED being Nora, it gave her special attention, she had fun in Guest pretending to be something she wasn't and all but in the end she still needed her loss to be recognized and said her real name before getting hugged by Holy Wayne, in season 2 she has Lily and so she is able to be strong enough to keep her sanity together while Kevin was losing his mind but in season 3 she gave her away and so needs to be a mother again. Her journey to the other side isn't about her hating herself, it's about her needing to be with her kids again.
B) Thia may seem like a stretch but I think it's worth mentioning is that Kevin destroyed the other side in the episode beforehand with nukes and that seems very final, however, remember that Kevin was in Melbourne when the nukes launched, we are told once they launch the nukes Russia will launch them back at the US and end the world but we only see the bombs in Australia. Now I'm not a fan of people being too literal about this sort of stuff, I do think it's more powerful if the whole other side gets nuked to apocalypse but I think this fits thematically with the third season since from the opening moments the show tells us this season about what happens when the world DOESN'T end after everyone expects or wants it to, why wouldn't the same go for what happens in the other side? Maybe a lot of people died but not enough to make the other place totally inaccessible or useless to anyone else who needs it.
Another key component of this puzzle is water. Both times Kevin goes to the other side he emerges from water, in the last season he has to drown himself to get to the other side just like Nora. Water is a symbol in this show for cleansing, not so much season 1 since they were mainly adapting the book, but season 2 is all about Miracle and the water from the spring where Kevin tried to kill himself, when he sees Patti in the other side she's floating in a pool and layer he has to drown her, the entire third season is about a great flood coming and everyone but Nora and Matt trying to stop it from happening. Nora has to hold her breath in irradiated water to go to where they are then she has to find boat after boat after boat before finally reaching her family, when we catch up with her we see all these red marks around her hairline, may be due to old age sure, but it may be because of the radiation she had to endure to go and come back just like Kevin has that scar he wants to show Nora but we never see, sure it can be from the pacemaker surgery but it might be from having to cut his twin brother open to get the key to end the world.
One last thing to bring up is who Kevin and Nora need to come back. For both of them the people to bring them back are total strangers who the main characters only heard of in passing, either Richard Burton aka God or the Doctor that created the machine that brought Nora to the other side and back, nothing much to add just another parallel.
Umtimately the point of the final scene is that it doesn't matter if Nora really saw her family or not it's just a nicer story, it may or may not be true, what matters is that Kevin believes her, that's why it's so perfect, I think the only bad fan theories are the ones that actively rob the text from its power so forgive me if some of you feel this way about mine but I think the scene is much more powerful if it's about mutual understanding and growth, whether they do it literally or not they have to kill themselves in order to become the people they need to be and they need each other and that's what the other side is, a place to kill yourself in order to move on. Thanks for coming to my TED talk, this is literally the greatest show I've ever seen.
TL;DR: Nora died and went on her own International Assassin style journey to let go of her past and move on.

247
secretwiki/ffmpeg.html Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,247 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head>
<!-- 2022-05-23 Mon 17:30 -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
<title>&lrm;</title>
<meta name="generator" content="Org mode" />
<meta name="author" content="user" />
<style type="text/css">
<!--/*--><![CDATA[/*><!--*/
.title { text-align: center;
margin-bottom: .2em; }
.subtitle { text-align: center;
font-size: medium;
font-weight: bold;
margin-top:0; }
.todo { font-family: monospace; color: red; }
.done { font-family: monospace; color: green; }
.priority { font-family: monospace; color: orange; }
.tag { background-color: #eee; font-family: monospace;
padding: 2px; font-size: 80%; font-weight: normal; }
.timestamp { color: #bebebe; }
.timestamp-kwd { color: #5f9ea0; }
.org-right { margin-left: auto; margin-right: 0px; text-align: right; }
.org-left { margin-left: 0px; margin-right: auto; text-align: left; }
.org-center { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center; }
.underline { text-decoration: underline; }
#postamble p, #preamble p { font-size: 90%; margin: .2em; }
p.verse { margin-left: 3%; }
pre {
border: 1px solid #ccc;
box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #eee;
padding: 8pt;
font-family: monospace;
overflow: auto;
margin: 1.2em;
}
pre.src {
position: relative;
overflow: auto;
padding-top: 1.2em;
}
pre.src:before {
display: none;
position: absolute;
background-color: white;
top: -10px;
right: 10px;
padding: 3px;
border: 1px solid black;
}
pre.src:hover:before { display: inline; margin-top: 14px;}
/* Languages per Org manual */
pre.src-asymptote:before { content: 'Asymptote'; }
pre.src-awk:before { content: 'Awk'; }
pre.src-C:before { content: 'C'; }
/* pre.src-C++ doesn't work in CSS */
pre.src-clojure:before { content: 'Clojure'; }
pre.src-css:before { content: 'CSS'; }
pre.src-D:before { content: 'D'; }
pre.src-ditaa:before { content: 'ditaa'; }
pre.src-dot:before { content: 'Graphviz'; }
pre.src-calc:before { content: 'Emacs Calc'; }
pre.src-emacs-lisp:before { content: 'Emacs Lisp'; }
pre.src-fortran:before { content: 'Fortran'; }
pre.src-gnuplot:before { content: 'gnuplot'; }
pre.src-haskell:before { content: 'Haskell'; }
pre.src-hledger:before { content: 'hledger'; }
pre.src-java:before { content: 'Java'; }
pre.src-js:before { content: 'Javascript'; }
pre.src-latex:before { content: 'LaTeX'; }
pre.src-ledger:before { content: 'Ledger'; }
pre.src-lisp:before { content: 'Lisp'; }
pre.src-lilypond:before { content: 'Lilypond'; }
pre.src-lua:before { content: 'Lua'; }
pre.src-matlab:before { content: 'MATLAB'; }
pre.src-mscgen:before { content: 'Mscgen'; }
pre.src-ocaml:before { content: 'Objective Caml'; }
pre.src-octave:before { content: 'Octave'; }
pre.src-org:before { content: 'Org mode'; }
pre.src-oz:before { content: 'OZ'; }
pre.src-plantuml:before { content: 'Plantuml'; }
pre.src-processing:before { content: 'Processing.js'; }
pre.src-python:before { content: 'Python'; }
pre.src-R:before { content: 'R'; }
pre.src-ruby:before { content: 'Ruby'; }
pre.src-sass:before { content: 'Sass'; }
pre.src-scheme:before { content: 'Scheme'; }
pre.src-screen:before { content: 'Gnu Screen'; }
pre.src-sed:before { content: 'Sed'; }
pre.src-sh:before { content: 'shell'; }
pre.src-sql:before { content: 'SQL'; }
pre.src-sqlite:before { content: 'SQLite'; }
/* additional languages in org.el's org-babel-load-languages alist */
pre.src-forth:before { content: 'Forth'; }
pre.src-io:before { content: 'IO'; }
pre.src-J:before { content: 'J'; }
pre.src-makefile:before { content: 'Makefile'; }
pre.src-maxima:before { content: 'Maxima'; }
pre.src-perl:before { content: 'Perl'; }
pre.src-picolisp:before { content: 'Pico Lisp'; }
pre.src-scala:before { content: 'Scala'; }
pre.src-shell:before { content: 'Shell Script'; }
pre.src-ebnf2ps:before { content: 'ebfn2ps'; }
/* additional language identifiers per "defun org-babel-execute"
in ob-*.el */
pre.src-cpp:before { content: 'C++'; }
pre.src-abc:before { content: 'ABC'; }
pre.src-coq:before { content: 'Coq'; }
pre.src-groovy:before { content: 'Groovy'; }
/* additional language identifiers from org-babel-shell-names in
ob-shell.el: ob-shell is the only babel language using a lambda to put
the execution function name together. */
pre.src-bash:before { content: 'bash'; }
pre.src-csh:before { content: 'csh'; }
pre.src-ash:before { content: 'ash'; }
pre.src-dash:before { content: 'dash'; }
pre.src-ksh:before { content: 'ksh'; }
pre.src-mksh:before { content: 'mksh'; }
pre.src-posh:before { content: 'posh'; }
/* Additional Emacs modes also supported by the LaTeX listings package */
pre.src-ada:before { content: 'Ada'; }
pre.src-asm:before { content: 'Assembler'; }
pre.src-caml:before { content: 'Caml'; }
pre.src-delphi:before { content: 'Delphi'; }
pre.src-html:before { content: 'HTML'; }
pre.src-idl:before { content: 'IDL'; }
pre.src-mercury:before { content: 'Mercury'; }
pre.src-metapost:before { content: 'MetaPost'; }
pre.src-modula-2:before { content: 'Modula-2'; }
pre.src-pascal:before { content: 'Pascal'; }
pre.src-ps:before { content: 'PostScript'; }
pre.src-prolog:before { content: 'Prolog'; }
pre.src-simula:before { content: 'Simula'; }
pre.src-tcl:before { content: 'tcl'; }
pre.src-tex:before { content: 'TeX'; }
pre.src-plain-tex:before { content: 'Plain TeX'; }
pre.src-verilog:before { content: 'Verilog'; }
pre.src-vhdl:before { content: 'VHDL'; }
pre.src-xml:before { content: 'XML'; }
pre.src-nxml:before { content: 'XML'; }
/* add a generic configuration mode; LaTeX export needs an additional
(add-to-list 'org-latex-listings-langs '(conf " ")) in .emacs */
pre.src-conf:before { content: 'Configuration File'; }
table { border-collapse:collapse; }
caption.t-above { caption-side: top; }
caption.t-bottom { caption-side: bottom; }
td, th { vertical-align:top; }
th.org-right { text-align: center; }
th.org-left { text-align: center; }
th.org-center { text-align: center; }
td.org-right { text-align: right; }
td.org-left { text-align: left; }
td.org-center { text-align: center; }
dt { font-weight: bold; }
.footpara { display: inline; }
.footdef { margin-bottom: 1em; }
.figure { padding: 1em; }
.figure p { text-align: center; }
.equation-container {
display: table;
text-align: center;
width: 100%;
}
.equation {
vertical-align: middle;
}
.equation-label {
display: table-cell;
text-align: right;
vertical-align: middle;
}
.inlinetask {
padding: 10px;
border: 2px solid gray;
margin: 10px;
background: #ffffcc;
}
#org-div-home-and-up
{ text-align: right; font-size: 70%; white-space: nowrap; }
textarea { overflow-x: auto; }
.linenr { font-size: smaller }
.code-highlighted { background-color: #ffff00; }
.org-info-js_info-navigation { border-style: none; }
#org-info-js_console-label
{ font-size: 10px; font-weight: bold; white-space: nowrap; }
.org-info-js_search-highlight
{ background-color: #ffff00; color: #000000; font-weight: bold; }
.org-svg { width: 90%; }
/*]]>*/-->
</style>
<script type="text/javascript">
// @license magnet:?xt=urn:btih:e95b018ef3580986a04669f1b5879592219e2a7a&dn=public-domain.txt Public Domain
<!--/*--><![CDATA[/*><!--*/
function CodeHighlightOn(elem, id)
{
var target = document.getElementById(id);
if(null != target) {
elem.classList.add("code-highlighted");
target.classList.add("code-highlighted");
}
}
function CodeHighlightOff(elem, id)
{
var target = document.getElementById(id);
if(null != target) {
elem.classList.remove("code-highlighted");
target.classList.remove("code-highlighted");
}
}
/*]]>*///-->
// @license-end
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="content">
<div id="table-of-contents">
<h2>Table of Contents</h2>
<div id="text-table-of-contents">
<ul>
<li><a href="#org17c66cd">1. Concatenare dei file video</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
</div>
<div id="outline-container-org17c66cd" class="outline-2">
<h2 id="org17c66cd"><span class="section-number-2">1</span> Concatenare dei file video</h2>
<div class="outline-text-2" id="text-1">
<pre class="example">
ffmpeg -loglevel info -f concat -safe 0 -i join-title.ffmpeg -c copy -map 0 "Whole Title.mkv"
</pre>
<pre class="example">
&gt; cat join-title.ffmpeg
file 'Case Closed - 078 - Phantom Thief 1412 (Part 1) [DarkDream].mkv'
file 'Case Closed - 079 - Phantom Thief 1412 (Part 2) [DarkDream].mkv'
</pre>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="postamble" class="status">
<p class="author">Author: user</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>

9
secretwiki/ffmpeg.org Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
* Concatenare dei file video
#+begin_src
ffmpeg -loglevel info -f concat -safe 0 -i join-title.ffmpeg -c copy -map 0 "Whole Title.mkv"
#+end_src
#+begin_src
> cat join-title.ffmpeg
file 'Case Closed - 078 - Phantom Thief 1412 (Part 1) [DarkDream].mkv'
file 'Case Closed - 079 - Phantom Thief 1412 (Part 2) [DarkDream].mkv'
#+end_src

View File

@ -23,6 +23,9 @@ DNS server.
Serve:
- pihole e tutte le dipendenze
** Gancio
Wifi AP fatto in casa con raspberry pi. Funziona male ma funziona. Il
wifi è un meme.
** Ghigno
SOC utilizzato dai genitori di bparodi. È una macchina con gentoo che
all'accensione avvia X e firefox --kiosk su tty7 e viene utilizzata
come terminale per Jellyfin.
@ -95,6 +98,8 @@ Vm dietro vpn, generalmente usata per cose relative alle feste.
Serve:
- jupyter notebook per Neutravel
- gitbucket
** Pipwolf
SOC utilizzato da bparodi come access point di emergenza alla rete di casa.
** Plottigat
Matrix server.

View File

@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head>
<!-- 2022-05-20 Fri 09:41 -->
<!-- 2022-05-23 Mon 17:31 -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
<title>Lezzo secret wiki</title>
@ -17,13 +17,15 @@
<p>
Ogni pagina è disponibile anche in org-mode sostituendo .org a.html.
</p>
<div id="outline-container-orga79a45e" class="outline-2">
<h2 id="orga79a45e">Pagine</h2>
<div class="outline-text-2" id="text-orga79a45e">
<div id="outline-container-org7bb25b2" class="outline-2">
<h2 id="org7bb25b2">Pagine</h2>
<div class="outline-text-2" id="text-org7bb25b2">
<ul class="org-ul">
<li><a href="./hosts.html">Hosts</a></li>
<li><a href="./commands.html">Frequently used commands</a></li>
<li><a href="./sonarr.html">Sonarr</a></li>
<li><a href="./ffmpeg.html">Appunti su ffmpeg</a></li>
<li><a href="./raspi.html">Raspberry pi model table</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
</div>

View File

@ -4,3 +4,5 @@ Ogni pagina è disponibile anche in org-mode sostituendo .org a.html.
- [[./hosts.html][Hosts]]
- [[./commands.html][Frequently used commands]]
- [[./sonarr.html][Sonarr]]
- [[./ffmpeg.html][Appunti su ffmpeg]]
- [[./raspi.html][Raspberry pi model table]]

271
secretwiki/raspi.html Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,271 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head>
<!-- 2022-05-23 Mon 17:30 -->
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" />
<title>&lrm;</title>
<meta name="generator" content="Org mode" />
<meta name="author" content="user" />
<style type="text/css">
<!--/*--><![CDATA[/*><!--*/
.title { text-align: center;
margin-bottom: .2em; }
.subtitle { text-align: center;
font-size: medium;
font-weight: bold;
margin-top:0; }
.todo { font-family: monospace; color: red; }
.done { font-family: monospace; color: green; }
.priority { font-family: monospace; color: orange; }
.tag { background-color: #eee; font-family: monospace;
padding: 2px; font-size: 80%; font-weight: normal; }
.timestamp { color: #bebebe; }
.timestamp-kwd { color: #5f9ea0; }
.org-right { margin-left: auto; margin-right: 0px; text-align: right; }
.org-left { margin-left: 0px; margin-right: auto; text-align: left; }
.org-center { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center; }
.underline { text-decoration: underline; }
#postamble p, #preamble p { font-size: 90%; margin: .2em; }
p.verse { margin-left: 3%; }
pre {
border: 1px solid #ccc;
box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #eee;
padding: 8pt;
font-family: monospace;
overflow: auto;
margin: 1.2em;
}
pre.src {
position: relative;
overflow: auto;
padding-top: 1.2em;
}
pre.src:before {
display: none;
position: absolute;
background-color: white;
top: -10px;
right: 10px;
padding: 3px;
border: 1px solid black;
}
pre.src:hover:before { display: inline; margin-top: 14px;}
/* Languages per Org manual */
pre.src-asymptote:before { content: 'Asymptote'; }
pre.src-awk:before { content: 'Awk'; }
pre.src-C:before { content: 'C'; }
/* pre.src-C++ doesn't work in CSS */
pre.src-clojure:before { content: 'Clojure'; }
pre.src-css:before { content: 'CSS'; }
pre.src-D:before { content: 'D'; }
pre.src-ditaa:before { content: 'ditaa'; }
pre.src-dot:before { content: 'Graphviz'; }
pre.src-calc:before { content: 'Emacs Calc'; }
pre.src-emacs-lisp:before { content: 'Emacs Lisp'; }
pre.src-fortran:before { content: 'Fortran'; }
pre.src-gnuplot:before { content: 'gnuplot'; }
pre.src-haskell:before { content: 'Haskell'; }
pre.src-hledger:before { content: 'hledger'; }
pre.src-java:before { content: 'Java'; }
pre.src-js:before { content: 'Javascript'; }
pre.src-latex:before { content: 'LaTeX'; }
pre.src-ledger:before { content: 'Ledger'; }
pre.src-lisp:before { content: 'Lisp'; }
pre.src-lilypond:before { content: 'Lilypond'; }
pre.src-lua:before { content: 'Lua'; }
pre.src-matlab:before { content: 'MATLAB'; }
pre.src-mscgen:before { content: 'Mscgen'; }
pre.src-ocaml:before { content: 'Objective Caml'; }
pre.src-octave:before { content: 'Octave'; }
pre.src-org:before { content: 'Org mode'; }
pre.src-oz:before { content: 'OZ'; }
pre.src-plantuml:before { content: 'Plantuml'; }
pre.src-processing:before { content: 'Processing.js'; }
pre.src-python:before { content: 'Python'; }
pre.src-R:before { content: 'R'; }
pre.src-ruby:before { content: 'Ruby'; }
pre.src-sass:before { content: 'Sass'; }
pre.src-scheme:before { content: 'Scheme'; }
pre.src-screen:before { content: 'Gnu Screen'; }
pre.src-sed:before { content: 'Sed'; }
pre.src-sh:before { content: 'shell'; }
pre.src-sql:before { content: 'SQL'; }
pre.src-sqlite:before { content: 'SQLite'; }
/* additional languages in org.el's org-babel-load-languages alist */
pre.src-forth:before { content: 'Forth'; }
pre.src-io:before { content: 'IO'; }
pre.src-J:before { content: 'J'; }
pre.src-makefile:before { content: 'Makefile'; }
pre.src-maxima:before { content: 'Maxima'; }
pre.src-perl:before { content: 'Perl'; }
pre.src-picolisp:before { content: 'Pico Lisp'; }
pre.src-scala:before { content: 'Scala'; }
pre.src-shell:before { content: 'Shell Script'; }
pre.src-ebnf2ps:before { content: 'ebfn2ps'; }
/* additional language identifiers per "defun org-babel-execute"
in ob-*.el */
pre.src-cpp:before { content: 'C++'; }
pre.src-abc:before { content: 'ABC'; }
pre.src-coq:before { content: 'Coq'; }
pre.src-groovy:before { content: 'Groovy'; }
/* additional language identifiers from org-babel-shell-names in
ob-shell.el: ob-shell is the only babel language using a lambda to put
the execution function name together. */
pre.src-bash:before { content: 'bash'; }
pre.src-csh:before { content: 'csh'; }
pre.src-ash:before { content: 'ash'; }
pre.src-dash:before { content: 'dash'; }
pre.src-ksh:before { content: 'ksh'; }
pre.src-mksh:before { content: 'mksh'; }
pre.src-posh:before { content: 'posh'; }
/* Additional Emacs modes also supported by the LaTeX listings package */
pre.src-ada:before { content: 'Ada'; }
pre.src-asm:before { content: 'Assembler'; }
pre.src-caml:before { content: 'Caml'; }
pre.src-delphi:before { content: 'Delphi'; }
pre.src-html:before { content: 'HTML'; }
pre.src-idl:before { content: 'IDL'; }
pre.src-mercury:before { content: 'Mercury'; }
pre.src-metapost:before { content: 'MetaPost'; }
pre.src-modula-2:before { content: 'Modula-2'; }
pre.src-pascal:before { content: 'Pascal'; }
pre.src-ps:before { content: 'PostScript'; }
pre.src-prolog:before { content: 'Prolog'; }
pre.src-simula:before { content: 'Simula'; }
pre.src-tcl:before { content: 'tcl'; }
pre.src-tex:before { content: 'TeX'; }
pre.src-plain-tex:before { content: 'Plain TeX'; }
pre.src-verilog:before { content: 'Verilog'; }
pre.src-vhdl:before { content: 'VHDL'; }
pre.src-xml:before { content: 'XML'; }
pre.src-nxml:before { content: 'XML'; }
/* add a generic configuration mode; LaTeX export needs an additional
(add-to-list 'org-latex-listings-langs '(conf " ")) in .emacs */
pre.src-conf:before { content: 'Configuration File'; }
table { border-collapse:collapse; }
caption.t-above { caption-side: top; }
caption.t-bottom { caption-side: bottom; }
td, th { vertical-align:top; }
th.org-right { text-align: center; }
th.org-left { text-align: center; }
th.org-center { text-align: center; }
td.org-right { text-align: right; }
td.org-left { text-align: left; }
td.org-center { text-align: center; }
dt { font-weight: bold; }
.footpara { display: inline; }
.footdef { margin-bottom: 1em; }
.figure { padding: 1em; }
.figure p { text-align: center; }
.equation-container {
display: table;
text-align: center;
width: 100%;
}
.equation {
vertical-align: middle;
}
.equation-label {
display: table-cell;
text-align: right;
vertical-align: middle;
}
.inlinetask {
padding: 10px;
border: 2px solid gray;
margin: 10px;
background: #ffffcc;
}
#org-div-home-and-up
{ text-align: right; font-size: 70%; white-space: nowrap; }
textarea { overflow-x: auto; }
.linenr { font-size: smaller }
.code-highlighted { background-color: #ffff00; }
.org-info-js_info-navigation { border-style: none; }
#org-info-js_console-label
{ font-size: 10px; font-weight: bold; white-space: nowrap; }
.org-info-js_search-highlight
{ background-color: #ffff00; color: #000000; font-weight: bold; }
.org-svg { width: 90%; }
/*]]>*/-->
</style>
<script type="text/javascript">
// @license magnet:?xt=urn:btih:e95b018ef3580986a04669f1b5879592219e2a7a&dn=public-domain.txt Public Domain
<!--/*--><![CDATA[/*><!--*/
function CodeHighlightOn(elem, id)
{
var target = document.getElementById(id);
if(null != target) {
elem.classList.add("code-highlighted");
target.classList.add("code-highlighted");
}
}
function CodeHighlightOff(elem, id)
{
var target = document.getElementById(id);
if(null != target) {
elem.classList.remove("code-highlighted");
target.classList.remove("code-highlighted");
}
}
/*]]>*///-->
// @license-end
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="content">
<table border="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="6" rules="groups" frame="hsides">
<colgroup>
<col class="org-left" />
<col class="org-right" />
</colgroup>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">Raspberry Pi</td>
<td class="org-right">Processor Label</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi 4 and 400</td>
<td class="org-right">2711</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi 3</td>
<td class="org-right">2837</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi 2</td>
<td class="org-right">2836 or 2837</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi (1)</td>
<td class="org-right">2835</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi Zero</td>
<td class="org-right">2835</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="org-left">RPi Pico</td>
<td class="org-right">Raspberry Pi logo</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
<div id="postamble" class="status">
<p class="author">Author: user</p>
</div>
</body>
</html>

7
secretwiki/raspi.org Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
| Raspberry Pi | Processor Label |
| RPi 4 and 400 | 2711 |
| RPi 3 | 2837 |
| RPi 2 | 2836 or 2837 |
| RPi (1) | 2835 |
| RPi Zero | 2835 |
| RPi Pico | Raspberry Pi logo |