

You can also mux it into the same file if you prefer embedding it into the same file (in FFmpeg, add an extra -i before the lavfi, do -c:v copy -c:a copy, -map 0, -map 1:s). I can post a more complete command if you’re interested.
You can also mux it into the same file if you prefer embedding it into the same file (in FFmpeg, add an extra -i before the lavfi, do -c:v copy -c:a copy, -map 0, -map 1:s). I can post a more complete command if you’re interested.
Finally one I can help with.
CBC Gem (prevously watch.cbc.ca) uses the 608 closed caption format in their streams instead of subtitles. (Closed captions being part of ATSC for TV streams).
FFmpeg can extract closed captions and convert them to SRT (subrip) or ASS (Substation Alpha) formats (the latter also converting colors and positions better).
Command is as follows
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i "movie='input.mp4'[out0+subcc]" -map s "output.ssa"
Replace the input and output correspondingly.
(Edit: this assumes you used yt-dip or youtube-dl to do the download)
RedoxOS! There’s been solid progress too, beyond just having a functional microkernel, they have many of the userspace tools/their version of coreutils, even a desktop environment already mostly implemented!
My understanding is that it shouldn’t be too bad to port some other things over as well. The main issue I had was just the lack of drivers, especially since it’s still tricky even on Linux, and the microkernel architecture (though more secure) also means there’s no way to reuse any of those from Linux
It keeps folder structure now? I remember when I tried to import my Digikam/Piwigo based collection, it would dump it all into 1 album flattening the hierarchy if directories.IIRC this was a technical decision on Immich choosing to use a list of albums vs a folder hierarchy. I’ll need to give it another try if it’s changed