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Don't need to pipe the output into rs if you just tell jot to use a null separator character.
In this case it's better do to use the dedicated tool
yes 6 (tail from 6th line)
Requires googlecl (http://code.google.com/p/googlecl/)
Even better when you wrap this in a script and allow the --date=STRING to be $1. Then you can type:
whatson "next Thursday"
The date string for UNIX date is very flexible. You can also add --cal "[regex]" to the end for multiple calendars.
This shell function takes a single argument, which is used as the base name of the .wav, .timing and .session files created. To create a screencast:
$ screencast test
type and talk ...
then type 'exit' or to exit the screencast.
test.wav will contain the audio from your screencast.
test.session will contain text and control characters needed to paint the screen
test.timing will contain timing information needed to synch individual keystrokes in test.session with the audio.
to play back:
$ aplay test.wav & scriptreplay test.{timing,session}
NOTE: because the shell function uses the variable "$!", and bash likes to expand '!' during history expansion, you will need to turn off bash's history before you enter the shell function.
This can be achieved using the command
$set +H
This command extracts 10 seconds worth of frames, starting from 00:15:45 position, from filename.avi and stores them into out_frames folder as jpeg files. Subtitles are turned off with -sid 999 option.
How about this one ?
[UPDATE: Now works for multiple connected outputs]
I woke up around midnight with an urge to do some late night hacking, but I didn't want a bright monitor screwing up my body's circadian rhythm. I've heard that at night blue (short wavelength) lights are particularly bad for your diurnal clock. That may be a bunch of hooey, but it is true that redder (longer wavelength) colors are easier on my eyes at night.
This command makes the screen dimmer and adjusts the gamma curves to improve contrast, particularly darkening blues and greens (Rɣ=2, Gɣ=3, Bɣ=4). To reset your screen to normal, you can run this command:
$ xrandr | sed -n 's/ connected.*//p' | xargs -n1 -tri xrandr --output {} --brightness 1 --gamma 1:1:1
or, more briefly,
$ xgamma -g 1
Note: The sed part is fragile and wrong. I'm doing it this way because of a misfeature in xrandr(1), which requires an output be specified but has no programmatic way of querying available outputs. Someone needs to patch up xrandr to be shell script friendly or at least add virtual outputs named "PRIMARY" and "ALL".
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Todo: Screen should dim (gradually) at sunset and brighten at sunrise. I think this could be done with a self-resubmitting at job, but I'm running into the commandlinefu 127 character limit just getting the sunrise time:
$ wget http://aa.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/aa_pap.pl --post-data=$(date "+xxy=%Y&xxm=%m&xxd=%d")"&st=WA&place=Seattle" -q -O- | sed -rn 's/\W*Sunrise\W*(.*)/\1/p'
I hope some clever hacker comes up with a command line interface to Google's "OneBox", since the correct time shows up as the first hit when googling for "sunrise:cityname".
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[Thank you to @flatcap for the sed improvement, which is much better than the head|tail|cut silliness I had before. And thank you to @braunmagrin for pointing out that the "connected" output may not be on the second line.]
You can omit the -d to see what's inside directories. In that case, you may want -a to see dotfiles inside those directories. (Otherwise you don't need -a since you're explicitly looking at them.)