This uses a search function, making it temporary, and it does not
change how the inbox functions or sorts messages beyond this task:
Click into the Gmail Search box and type the following exactly:
is:unread
This info from http://osxdaily.com/2013/06/30/show-unread-messages-gmail/
Sunday, May 25, 2014
Monday, July 15, 2013
How to Set the Mythbuntu 12.04 Root password for mysql
All this info from...
http://askubuntu.com/questions/75153/i-just-installed-mythbuntu-what-is-the-mysql-root-password
Please reset MySQL password as below:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/75153/i-just-installed-mythbuntu-what-is-the-mysql-root-password
Please reset MySQL password as below:
- Ctrl + Alt + T to launch terminal
- sudo dpkg-reconfigure mysql-server-5.5
- New password for the MySQL "root" user: mysqlsamplepassword
- Repeat password for the MySQL "root" user: mysqlsamplepassword
Friday, February 15, 2013
Fade instead of STOP
This is from the Rivendell Mailing list from Wayne Merricks
Any suggestion where I can read of a way to FADE a playing source when we come to a live event rather than having to chop audio cold with the STOP button? Im sure its here; I just cant find it.
Two simple ways of doing this:
Make a macro and stick it on the panel to fade to be fired manually
Make an aux log that fires a few seconds before the live event starts
to fade down the main log
The macro itself is fairly simple:
PS executes a stop with an optional log/port to stop and optional fade,
so we'll do the following:
PS 0 5000!
SP 5000! ( wait for 5 seconds, t his is important otherwise the fade
will start, the macro will then nearly instantly terminate and the fade
will mess up before its actually finished fading (especially if an event
is queued to follow the fade)
The way I do it is to create an aux log so that I get a nice fade into
hard timed events that start on the hour and on the half hour. My aux
log is a simple log that looks like the following:
00:29:54 Play Fade Macro
00:59:54 Play Fade Macro (etc etc for the whole day)
I chose to start it a second early as I had some odd results with
overlapping of macros and hard times that sometimes seemed to make the
times get missed and the hard timed event would therefore not auto
start. The strange part was most of the time it worked fine but then
you'd get that call at 3 in the morning. So I decided 1 second of dead
air was preferable to a phone call.
At the end of the aux log is a log chain to the same aux log (so that
the timed events refresh).
FYI don't put the macro in your main log as a timed event even though
it kind of makes sense. My feeble brain expected a nice fade out but
the reality is an abrupt song stop, then 5 seconds of "fading" deadly
silence before the next event kicks in.
Any suggestion where I can read of a way to FADE a playing source when we come to a live event rather than having to chop audio cold with the STOP button? Im sure its here; I just cant find it.
Two simple ways of doing this:
Make a macro and stick it on the panel to fade to be fired manually
Make an aux log that fires a few seconds before the live event starts
to fade down the main log
The macro itself is fairly simple:
PS executes a stop with an optional log/port to stop and optional fade,
will start, the macro will then nearly instantly terminate and the fade
will mess up before its actually finished fading (especially if an event
is queued to follow the fade)
The way I do it is to create an aux log so that I get a nice fade into
hard timed events that start on the hour and on the half hour. My aux
log is a simple log that looks like the following:
00:29:54 Play Fade Macro
00:59:54 Play Fade Macro (etc etc for the whole day)
I chose to start it a second early as I had some odd results with
overlapping of macros and hard times that sometimes seemed to make the
times get missed and the hard timed event would therefore not auto
start. The strange part was most of the time it worked fine but then
you'd get that call at 3 in the morning. So I decided 1 second of dead
air was preferable to a phone call.
At the end of the aux log is a log chain to the same aux log (so that
the timed events refresh).
FYI don't put the macro in your main log as a timed event even though
it kind of makes sense. My feeble brain expected a nice fade out but
the reality is an abrupt song stop, then 5 seconds of "fading" deadly
silence before the next event kicks in.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Working out weather a week is the 1st 2nd 3rd 4th week of the year
I needed a program to work out what week number it was for Radio station Log generation.... so I made this. It makes pretty boring reading...
#!/bin/bash
WEEK_NUM=`date +%V`
echo $WEEK_NUM
sleep 1
#DIV_WEEK=`expr $WEEK_NUM % 4`
#echo $DIV_WEEK
case "$WEEK_NUM" in
01) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
export WEEK4=4
export WEEK5=1
export WEEK6=2
;;
02) export THIS_WEEK=2
export WEEK2=3
export WEEK3=4
export WEEK4=1
export WEEK5=2
export WEEK6=3
;;
03) export THIS_WEEK=3
export WEEK2=4
export WEEK3=1
export WEEK4=2
export WEEK5=3
export WEEK6=4
;;
04) export THIS_WEEK=4
export WEEK2=1
export WEEK3=2
export WEEK4=3
export WEEK5=4
export WEEK6=5
;;
05) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
06) export THIS_WEEK=2
export WEEK2=3
export WEEK3=4
export WEEK4=1
export WEEK5=2
export WEEK6=3
;;
07) export THIS_WEEK=3
export WEEK2=4
export WEEK3=1
export WEEK4=2
export WEEK5=3
export WEEK6=4
;;
08) export THIS_WEEK=4
export WEEK2=1
export WEEK3=2
export WEEK4=3
export WEEK5=4
export WEEK6=5
;;
09) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
export WEEK4=4
export WEEK5=1
export WEEK6=2
;;
10) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
11) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
12) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
13) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
14) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
15) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
16) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
17) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
18) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
19) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
20) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
21) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
22) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
23) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
24) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
25) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
26) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
27) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
28) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
29) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
30) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
31) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
32) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
33) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
34) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
35) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
36) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
37) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
38) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
39) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
40) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
41) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
42) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
43) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
44) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
45) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
46) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
47) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
48) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
49) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
50) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
51) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
52) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
53) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
esac
echo 'this week is' $THIS_WEEK
echo 'week 2 is' $WEEK2
echo 'week 3 is' $WEEK3
echo 'week 4 is' $WEEK4
echo 'week 5 is' $WEEK5
echo 'week 6 is' $WEEK6
sleep 5
exit
#!/bin/bash
WEEK_NUM=`date +%V`
echo $WEEK_NUM
sleep 1
#DIV_WEEK=`expr $WEEK_NUM % 4`
#echo $DIV_WEEK
case "$WEEK_NUM" in
01) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
export WEEK4=4
export WEEK5=1
export WEEK6=2
;;
02) export THIS_WEEK=2
export WEEK2=3
export WEEK3=4
export WEEK4=1
export WEEK5=2
export WEEK6=3
;;
03) export THIS_WEEK=3
export WEEK2=4
export WEEK3=1
export WEEK4=2
export WEEK5=3
export WEEK6=4
;;
04) export THIS_WEEK=4
export WEEK2=1
export WEEK3=2
export WEEK4=3
export WEEK5=4
export WEEK6=5
;;
05) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
06) export THIS_WEEK=2
export WEEK2=3
export WEEK3=4
export WEEK4=1
export WEEK5=2
export WEEK6=3
;;
07) export THIS_WEEK=3
export WEEK2=4
export WEEK3=1
export WEEK4=2
export WEEK5=3
export WEEK6=4
;;
08) export THIS_WEEK=4
export WEEK2=1
export WEEK3=2
export WEEK4=3
export WEEK5=4
export WEEK6=5
;;
09) export THIS_WEEK=1
export WEEK2=2
export WEEK3=3
export WEEK4=4
export WEEK5=1
export WEEK6=2
;;
10) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
11) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
12) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
13) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
14) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
15) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
16) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
17) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
18) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
19) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
20) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
21) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
22) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
23) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
24) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
25) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
26) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
27) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
28) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
29) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
30) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
31) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
32) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
33) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
34) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
35) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
36) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
37) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
38) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
39) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
40) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
41) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
42) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
43) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
44) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
45) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
46) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
47) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
48) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
49) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
50) THIS_WEEK=2
WEEK2=3
WEEK3=4
WEEK4=1
WEEK5=2
WEEK6=3
;;
51) THIS_WEEK=3
WEEK2=4
WEEK3=1
WEEK4=2
WEEK5=3
WEEK6=4
;;
52) THIS_WEEK=4
WEEK2=1
WEEK3=2
WEEK4=3
WEEK5=4
WEEK6=5
;;
53) THIS_WEEK=1
WEEK2=2
WEEK3=3
WEEK4=4
WEEK5=1
WEEK6=2
;;
esac
echo 'this week is' $THIS_WEEK
echo 'week 2 is' $WEEK2
echo 'week 3 is' $WEEK3
echo 'week 4 is' $WEEK4
echo 'week 5 is' $WEEK5
echo 'week 6 is' $WEEK6
sleep 5
exit
Sunday, January 27, 2013
How to Install the Classic Gnome Menu in Unity in Ubuntu
All these instructions from Lori Kaufman's page at
http://www.howtogeek.com/105997/how-to-install-the-classic-gnome-menu-in-unity-in-ubuntu-11.10/
If you like the Unity desktop, but you’re used to the classic Gnome menu, there’s a way to install the Classic Gnome Menu on the top panel on the Unity desktop, allowing you to experience the best of both worlds.
We’ve shown you how to add the Classic Gnome Desktop to the logon screen, allowing you to login to a Gnome desktop with no Unity features. However, if you want to use both the Unity desktop and the classic Gnome menu, you can install a tool called Classic Menu Indicator.
First, we need to add the repository containing the Classic Menu Indicator program. To do this, press Ctrl + Alt + T to open a Terminal window. Type the following at the prompt and press Enter.
Enter your password when prompted.
A message displays telling you which PPA (Personal Package Archive) you are about to add to your system. Press Enter to continue adding the PPA.
Once the repository has been added, you must update it. Type the following command at the prompt and press Enter, or copy and paste it into the Terminal window.
Now, you can install Classic Menu Indicator. Type the following command at the prompt and press Enter, or copy and paste it into the Terminal window.
When the installation is finished, type “exit” (without the quotes) at the prompt and press Enter to close the Terminal window.
To apply the changes, you must log out of your session and log back in. To log out, select Log Out from the power menu in the upper, right corner of your screen on the top panel.
A confirmation Log Out dialog box displays. Click Log Out to continue logging out.
Once you have logged back in, the classic Gnome menu displays with the Ubuntu logo icon on the top panel to the left of the icons on the right side. If you decide you don’t want the menu, you can close it by selecting ClassicMenu Indicator | Quit from the Gnome menu.
You can easily show the classic Gnome menu again. To do so, click the Dash home button on the Unity launcher.
Start entering “classicmenu indicator” (without the quotes) in the search box. You do not need to press Enter. The results of your search display as you type, as illustrated in the image below. Click the ClassicMenu Indicator icon that displays.
Now, you can easily turn on the classic Gnome menu when you have trouble finding something using the Unity interface. It’s just as easy to turn if off again.
http://www.howtogeek.com/105997/how-to-install-the-classic-gnome-menu-in-unity-in-ubuntu-11.10/
If you like the Unity desktop, but you’re used to the classic Gnome menu, there’s a way to install the Classic Gnome Menu on the top panel on the Unity desktop, allowing you to experience the best of both worlds.
We’ve shown you how to add the Classic Gnome Desktop to the logon screen, allowing you to login to a Gnome desktop with no Unity features. However, if you want to use both the Unity desktop and the classic Gnome menu, you can install a tool called Classic Menu Indicator.
First, we need to add the repository containing the Classic Menu Indicator program. To do this, press Ctrl + Alt + T to open a Terminal window. Type the following at the prompt and press Enter.
sudo apt-add-repository ppa:diesch/testingNOTE: You can also copy and paste the command at the prompt. To paste text at the prompt, right-click on the Terminal window and select Paste from the popup menu.
Enter your password when prompted.
A message displays telling you which PPA (Personal Package Archive) you are about to add to your system. Press Enter to continue adding the PPA.
Once the repository has been added, you must update it. Type the following command at the prompt and press Enter, or copy and paste it into the Terminal window.
sudo apt-get updateThis command actually updates all the repositories in your system.
Now, you can install Classic Menu Indicator. Type the following command at the prompt and press Enter, or copy and paste it into the Terminal window.
sudo apt-get install classicmenu-indicator
When the installation is finished, type “exit” (without the quotes) at the prompt and press Enter to close the Terminal window.
To apply the changes, you must log out of your session and log back in. To log out, select Log Out from the power menu in the upper, right corner of your screen on the top panel.
A confirmation Log Out dialog box displays. Click Log Out to continue logging out.
Once you have logged back in, the classic Gnome menu displays with the Ubuntu logo icon on the top panel to the left of the icons on the right side. If you decide you don’t want the menu, you can close it by selecting ClassicMenu Indicator | Quit from the Gnome menu.
You can easily show the classic Gnome menu again. To do so, click the Dash home button on the Unity launcher.
Start entering “classicmenu indicator” (without the quotes) in the search box. You do not need to press Enter. The results of your search display as you type, as illustrated in the image below. Click the ClassicMenu Indicator icon that displays.
Now, you can easily turn on the classic Gnome menu when you have trouble finding something using the Unity interface. It’s just as easy to turn if off again.
VNC'ing to an Ubuntu 12.04 box with unity desktop
If you try vncing to use the remote desktop on Ubuntu with Unity, the session can be real slow if not impossible to use.
Try logging out and Log back in again using the Ubuntu 2d desktop.
The performance of the session will be improved and easy to use.
If you can't find the shortcut to get vnc running, go to the "Dash Home" and type vino-preferences. Then click on the "Desktop Sharing" icon
Try logging out and Log back in again using the Ubuntu 2d desktop.
The performance of the session will be improved and easy to use.
If you can't find the shortcut to get vnc running, go to the "Dash Home" and type vino-preferences. Then click on the "Desktop Sharing" icon
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Bulk converting of Old PCM Wave audio into new mp2 format for Rivendell
This idea courtesy of Daniel Kahn on the Rivendell mailing list Oct 16, 2012.
Take a copy of your library over to a machine with a Rivendell install
with nothing in the library. Now run this on your library:
for i in *;do echo $i;j=`echo $i | sed
's/_[0-9].*.*$//;s/^.*_//'`; rdimport --to-cart="$j"
--normalization-level=-13 --autotrim-level=0 music "$i"; done
rdimport converts your library. Now move the newly created library back
to your original machine.
I can't think why this shouldn't work. I am sure someone can write a
cleaner scripted then me.
So my better half Monica modified it ever so slightly because it suited me and made a shell script.
#!/bin/bash
for i in *.wav;
do
echo $i;
j=`echo $i | sed 's/_[0-9].*.*$//;s/^.*_//'`;
echo $j;
rdimport --verbose --segue-level=-10 --to-cart=$j --normalization-level=-13 --autotrim-level=0 --delete-cuts Album $i >> importlog.txt
#Note the line above this is all one line but gets word wrapped by google blogs.
done
Take a copy of your library over to a machine with a Rivendell install
with nothing in the library. Now run this on your library:
for i in *;do echo $i;j=`echo $i | sed
's/_[0-9].*.*$//;s/^.*_//'`;
--normalization-level=-13 --autotrim-level=0 music "$i"; done
to your original machine.
I can't think why this shouldn't work. I am sure someone can write a
cleaner scripted then me.
So my better half Monica modified it ever so slightly because it suited me and made a shell script.
#!/bin/bash
for i in *.wav;
do
echo $i;
j=`echo $i | sed 's/_[0-9].*.*$//;s/^.*_//'`;
echo $j;
rdimport --verbose --segue-level=-10 --to-cart=$j --normalization-level=-13 --autotrim-level=0 --delete-cuts Album $i >> importlog.txt
#Note the line above this is all one line but gets word wrapped by google blogs.
done
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