Besides moving to linux sooner, I would not dual boot at all, since I almost never used the other system.
Besides moving to linux sooner, I would not dual boot at all, since I almost never used the other system.
<- should be learning for his comp-sci final whatever right now. I was hoping it would get better. And then sunk cost fallacy…
Nah, not just monetary gain! Just wanted to get in front of the most obvious answer.
You can get all the IDs using yt-dlp
yt-dlp --flat-playlist --print id <playlist>
Assuming you’re on linux, you can add at the end to save the list to a file. ids_all.txt
You can also add
--compat-options no-youtube-unavailable-videos
to get only the list of available videos instead and then, again assuming you’re on linux, do
diff ids_all.txt ids_available.txt
to get the odd ones out. That’s the simplest I could come up with. You’ll have to hope you can use the wayback machine, or a good old exact search to turn up what video that ID actually referred to
Of course it is, but if you bought at cents and sell at $50K, then you’re only scamming rich assholes anyway.
(And now you’re the rich asshole!)