01-25-2017, 09:52 AM
Thanks for it, its always good for new Linux users like my self. In the weekend ill see all of it 8)
The Complete Linux Course, 7hrs+ free video tutorial
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01-25-2017, 09:52 AM
Thanks for it, its always good for new Linux users like my self. In the weekend ill see all of it 8)
01-25-2017, 10:35 AM
(01-24-2017, 06:27 PM)torreydale link Wrote: I have used the extension "Video Download Helper." But for YouTube videos, I have to use it in Firefox. Since Google owns YouTube, the folks at Google Chrome are good about not letting that extension work on YouTube. I downloaded from the Terminal with the "youtube-dl" command . Worked fine. Jocklad
Thank you torreydale
![]() You're welcome Hoffer77 ![]()
01-25-2017, 01:13 PM
youtube-dl ftw
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01-25-2017, 03:02 PM
I'm familiar with a YouTube Downloader for Windows. I knew about youtube-dl, but I wanted something graphical for me, and something I could recommend to others. Now that I'm more terminal brave than before, I may investigate youtube-dl. The ClipGrab program looks tempting. But I suppose if I want to avoid browser extensions and PPAs, youtube-dl would be the better option.
So far, I have everything working the way I need and want. Ten days ago, I even finally installed (to my laptop) that Samsung SSD I bought back in November. I'm enjoying the steady state of speed and reliance. I'll experiment later.
Want to thank me? Click my [Thank] link.
01-25-2017, 03:48 PM
thanks downloading the video and going to watch it over the next few days
Life on earth is expensive but it does include a free trip around the sun.
(01-25-2017, 01:13 PM)Jerry link Wrote: youtube-dl ftw [member=2]Jerry[/member], What's 'ftw' (file tree walk)? I used the standard youtube-dl [video URL] to download this video. What difference does youtube-dl ftw [video URL] make? [member=411]bitsnpcs[/member] - looks really useful - many thanks - cool! Cheers Mike
64bit OS (32-bit on Samsung[i] netbook) installed in [i]Legacy mode on MBR-formatted SSDs (except pi which uses a micro SDHC card):
2017 - Raspberry pi 3B (4cores) ~ [email protected] - LibreElec, used for upgrading our Samsung TV (excellent for the task) 2012 - Lenovo G580 2689 (2cores; 4threads] ~ [email protected] - LL3.8/Win8.1 dual-boot (LL working smoothly) 2011 - Samsung NP-N145 Plus (1core; 2threads) ~ Intel Atom [email protected] - LL 3.8 32-bit (64-bit too 'laggy') 2008 - Asus X71Q (2cores) ~ Intel [email protected] - LL4.6/Win8.1 dual-boot, LL works fine with kernel 4.15 2007 - Dell Latitude D630 (2cores) ~ Intel [email protected] - LL4.6, works well with kernel 4.4; 4.15 doesn't work
01-25-2017, 07:13 PM
Here is another free course. I took it several years ago over several weeks. Very good course.
https://www.edx.org/course/introduction-...-lfs101x-0 |
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