The basic command is just yt-dlp 'www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ'
tho.
Motorola lets you toggle the flashlight by shaking your phone, I use it a bunch. There's different motions for the camera and such, but I don't use those.
It's always worked. "Divide et impera" is a Latin phrase for a reason, it was how Philippus II of Macedonia described how he conquered a large part of current Greece.
I've never heard someone use curve in this way, and I've been on the internet for quite a while.
We have daily meetings in the software team just to battle this
I'm not arguing that people are switching to Firefox. I'm only saying that your argument about FF on Linux is just plain wrong.
I also prefer the UI/UX of FF over Chromium based browsers, but that's very subjective of course.
I've been using FF (and Thunderbird) for about 5 years now on my dual core old laptop running Gentoo, and it's always run pretty smooth. Especially when they switched to the Quantum web engine.
Kids these days
Wayland's been pretty nice the 3-4 years I've been using sway
Ah, I was hoping for the panel De Rechtvaardige Rechters (The Righteous Judges), but alas
Nevermind, it was a legal gray area in the EU for some time, but now it's legal
I've actually never looked into
yt-dlp
's default behaviour, as I've always been happy with the video and audio quality of the downloaded video. Probing the downloaded video from the command in my comment above yields for the videoVideo: vp9 (Profile 0) (vp09 / 0x39307076), yuv420p(tv, bt709), 1920x1080, 3751 kb/s, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 16k tbn (default)
, and for the audioAudio: aac (LC) (mp4a / 0x6134706D), 44100 Hz, stereo, fltp, 128 kb/s (default)
.