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225 lines
14 KiB
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225 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2837
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Title: HPR2837: parallax live desktops in android
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2837/hpr2837.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 17:43:55
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2837 entitled Parallax Live Desktop in Android.
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It is hosted by Operator and is about 17 minutes long and can remain an explicit flag.
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The summary is Parallax wallpaper, mouse giggling, system B, YouTube background play and more.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15.
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That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hello and welcome to the episode of Hacker Public Radio, your host operator.
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I'm going to go quickly go over live wallpapers in which what I'm currently messing with now
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is Parallax based, which is essentially kind of creating fake 3D images and when you rotate
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the phone, those layers will move around and make it appear like it's going to be in
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and provide a cool effect when you're playing with your phone.
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So there's a few apps out there that majority of them will give you a selection of however
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many default 3D live wallpapers, Parallax wallpapers and then some of them will have a predetermined
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number for you ones and then you can actually create your own by adding one or more or two
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or more multiple layers and then if you want to add like 10 layers then you have to pay
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whatever to unlock the ability to add more layers.
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So this Parallax effects is basically taking, there's kind of two approaches from the actual
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creating the images that I've seen so far.
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One is just to take random images and stack them on top of each other.
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So you might have the background of space and then maybe in front of that is a hand, a big
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hand that's reaching out or whatever, grabbing down something and then inside of that hand
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you might put a ball or a planet or something inside of that hand and maybe some effects
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around that between those layers.
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So when you're rotating around it kind of looks cool, like lens flare effects and things
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like that.
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So I've seen a number of pretty decent ones that have multiple layers but they're also
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somehow changing the dimensions of the layers as they get moved around.
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So as they're rotated they appear to shrink and expand to give it even more of a 3D effect.
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So there's, now I'll talk about more of that in a minute, the other method that I've
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seen online is also based on images like a image that is one image based off creating
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multiple layers based off of one image.
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And that's just using our Photoshop, the lack of a better term effects to put some distance
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in between your outlines, what you've cut out of the image and what you're going to
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remain in there.
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So for example, if you have a picture of a beautiful woman on the beach and you don't
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have a beach picture that will fit with that woman on the beach then you can actually
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cut the woman out of the beach and then pull her out and then you can take background
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and with some photoshopping you can add a percentage of 5% or whatever of the missing area
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around that with just guessing and doing some Photoshop techniques with some Phil techniques.
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And that allows you to shift right to put the girl in front of the beach and you can
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shift it around and you won't, there will be a minimum amount of noticing what, what
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noticing that there's going to be any loss of, of fidelity, right, a keys or thing, sorry.
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So that's kind of the cool part about it, it's actually some money here.
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Try not to be too obnoxious.
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So I think it's interesting, I've run across a few live wallpapers and I think the wall
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paper market could use some refreshing and I've looked at least within Android space.
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I've looked around and I've seen some pretty decent live wallpapers but due to CPU usage
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or something that just haven't really seen anything that's really blown me away and
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I've done some research and I've looked at other live wallpapers and they're all just
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kind of stinky or they're more tweet based wallpapers, well they'll tell you the weather
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or something equally stupid or unimportant.
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So those are halfway decent, the ones that are provide data or for example if it's raining
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outside it will show the rain in the background or if it's sunny outside it will show that
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it's sunny.
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Those are a little bit different and a little more creative but I'm wondering if you guys
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have any ideas around using this parallax effect to make some really cool interesting
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three-dimensional images into our objects or instances of environments, 3D environments
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with this parallax effect.
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I've got a few ideas of my own, I just haven't messed them all together or found an
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app that will let me add more than like three layers.
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But anyways, I just wanted to give that an update or just a little posts or a little
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quick tips on what I've been poking around with in that space.
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Let's see I'm trying to think of some other good live wallpapers.
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There's a few, a few of them out there that are just special effects, right?
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You know, they'll be like a water droplet or whatever, so whenever you touch something
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on the interface it'll drop a drop of thing of water, some kind of net nature-based effect.
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Outside of that there just doesn't really be anything super cool and I think with all
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the information on your phone, your personal device and all the things that it can do and
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all the information that it can pull, there has to be something creative that nobody
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has done yet.
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I'm trying to find what that live wallpaper would look like and how people would interact
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with it, right?
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The interaction is the key and then maybe if you have to or can think about social media
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aspect of it to make it somehow interactive with a social media aspect, maybe it hooks
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into say Facebook or whatever the kids are talking about nowadays.
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But that's just some of the options and some of the things that I've thought about here
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kind of recently.
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Let's see if I can get over, not get on with 10.
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Okay, anyways, I'm trying to think what else is going on.
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Still doing some mobile app testing.
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You might see some stuff on that.
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I wanted to talk about some of my LinkedIn posts.
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This one is on caffeine or what I'll call on ExpressO, so there's an app application out
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there called like mouse jiggler, I don't know if you ever heard of it, so this mouse jiggler
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app will every 59 seconds it'll press like the function 21 key or something like that.
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The cool thing about it is that the theory is that it'll keep your computer alive and
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jiggle your mouse, right?
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The last version I saw of it was quite obnoxious.
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It would substantially jiggle your mouse at least relative location and didn't move it
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to the center of the screen or anything like that.
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But it would jiggle your mouse like an unreasonable amount, like there's no reason to have the
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mouse jiggle that much.
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It only needs to move one pixel and back to the same direction.
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So that was kind of interesting.
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So I ran into a program called caffeine.
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This caffeine program will essentially do the same thing as, like I said, it'll press
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like the function 22 button every 59 seconds after and will keep the computer from going
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to sleep.
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That's kind of better than mouse jiggler.
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What I wanted was a script to automatically keep me logged in to web pages.
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So I looked to auto hotkey for this.
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Now auto hotkey has a thing that they can do where you can, in the background, send
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keys to a window that's not activated.
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So I said, cool.
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I can send, like, control shift to all the window titles and all the internet titles,
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all the internet backgrounds and refresh my page and keep myself logged in.
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What I found was that it doesn't appear to even work with those, maybe it's a security
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feature or whatever.
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But so what I ended up having to do was actually activate each window title within the whole
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environment and then control, press control, shoot me, control f5 on each one.
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So that's kind of cool.
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It's actually surprisingly not that useful.
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It actually out of the, you know, I want to say out of the seven or eight, nine, ten websites
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I tested three of them actually, it did not work for almost like you had to post something
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to the website to keep it, to keep it still active.
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So I've thought about some techniques, maybe some kind of browser plugin and I referenced
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those in the link for LinkedIn posts.
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But I've thought about some kind of browser shenanigans where it just arbitrarily posts
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data to the server to keep you alive with the current credentials, but that gets cookies
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involved and not really what I'm mess with, other people's cookies.
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So there might be a way to do it through, through auto high keys somehow to send a post
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request on a page that you're currently on, maybe through some shenanigans.
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But anyways, that's for that.
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Let's see.
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The next one was some of my system D scripts.
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So if you guys haven't poked with system D, better jump on the train.
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I have seen some implementations of system D. I think what you're supposed to do is create
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a script that points to another script.
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So create a system D service, that system D service points to a script and then that
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script actually does the stuff that you want to do.
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Now what I ended up doing was you can double escape basically environment variables and
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things like that.
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And I think it's kind of not really kosher to do this, but I essentially escape all my
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scripting inside of this system service.
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So all I have to do is modify the service.
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So instead of having to modify two scripts when I want to update my services, I only have
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to update the service.
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And I can say, okay, well, I want the service to change.
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And I also want the script that actually executes when the service just changes inside
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of there.
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So I have an all in one script.
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And I've got some links on the system D article on LinkedIn post for that one.
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Now I have seen this used in other places, system D scripts and like bass scripting inside
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a system D.
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So it's been done before and it's not super uncommon.
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But I would imagine that's not the kosher way to do it.
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But I have some examples that work for me that start up all my services and it's all in
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there and all in one file.
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You don't have to worry about doing that system D is actually really cool.
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If you're coming from a Windows environment, it's a bit like having the resource monitor
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for Windows 10 and up or whatever it is.
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It's a bit like the resource monitor.
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So you can actually get it to cool.
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Do all kinds of fun stuff where you can look at the logging, you can tailor the logging
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out.
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It's almost like an event manager slash system recovery thing or system resources thing.
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It's also similar to like for Linux, Linux environment, combination of like H top and
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IO top.
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So you can really do some really cool stuff with it.
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I just don't have that need.
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I don't have the need to like, you know, partition out, part dry space and CPU cycles and
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RAM to services, right, I just give everything 100%.
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So once you get on the system D bandwagon and these scripts will help you, that won't
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be too hard of a thing to worry about.
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I think I've already talked about my pirate naval action thing.
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I did a naval action script without a hockey that sails this shit for you.
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I'm pretty sure I did one on that.
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If I haven't, I might do a more whole episode on that one.
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You play YouTube and background.
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So if you have a YouTube or Android device and you're trying to play YouTube stuff and
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you turn your phone off, here's some other methods to get that across to do that.
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If you do not have root, the only way I know of is to actually have a program that keeps
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the, that kind of puts a picture in a picture basically for iOS or Android, I think 6162
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and up or 717 up, that basically does a picture in a picture and has YouTube playing inside
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of that picture.
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And then you can, it's an overlay.
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So that way the video is still playing, it's still on the foreground, but it's not actually
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in the foreground, it's playing in the background.
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It's kind of chinky.
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You can't actually turn the screen off in some cases, in most cases.
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There was another one called pipes, new pipes, and that's part of the whole, the new pipes
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were actually shitty.
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New pipes is actually a replacement for the YouTube, the normal YouTube player.
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And if you can get a hold of removing the normal YouTube player and just install, install
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a new pipe, it's a pretty different experience, especially with some ad-walking and things
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like that in place.
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The foolproof way around all this is to install, remove YouTube app and install YouTube
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vans.
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Now YouTube vans is a root-based thing that comes with just the root tool, whatever, it's
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a replacement of X, X mod type of thing.
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So it replaces the YouTube app.
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I think it basically hooks the YouTube app, pulls out, it's a replacement for the YouTube
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app, pulls out all the ads and stuff, pulls out the ability to stop the playback when
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you turn the phone off.
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And essentially makes it like the YouTube player, YouTube red player.
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So that's pretty cool.
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Oh, see.
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My mass active directory unlocks script, and that's pretty much it.
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Anyways, let's check out my LinkedIn, I'll put the links in there for this stuff, and
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I hope I might be able to do an episode on the parallax stuff once I've had some time
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to do a few other projects, but it's something I'm interested in and something I'm keeping
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in and out for, I'm getting into drawing a little bit and doing art on whether it's
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acape, and I might do some trials, tribulations there too.
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Cool.
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Have a good one.
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