Trust by Jeremy Keith (adactio.com)
I’m trying to understand why developers would trust third-party code more than a native browser feature.

Too tired rn to flesh this out but my two cents are: browser wars aftermath. It’s in the heads to not trust the native browsers because they usually fail miserable or are far behind in features. That’s mobile phones nowadays.

And… that’s a paradox now.. when you write vetted by all browsers I read "decided by Google", cuz nothing else survived the war with any meaningful voice here.

Custom Post Type: Comment by Matthias PfefferleMatthias Pfefferle (notiz.blog)
Eine Leseempfehlung vorweg: „Yes, Comments Are Still Relevant, But We Need a Better System“ von Justin Tadlock auf WPTavern! Soziale Netzwerke haben die Art wie wir kommunizieren drastisch verändert. Wir reagieren selten mit Text, statt dessen liken, re-tweeten, sharen und faven wir was das Zeu...

Ja bitte, @pfefferle@notiz.blog !

Diese Unterteilung zwischen Posts und Comments hat mich bei WP schon immer gestört. Der Code zur Darstellung ist [bei mir] inzwischen auch nur noch Kraut und Rüben. Es zerbröselt auch gerne mal was bei Updates und ich bekomme es erst später mit und darf dann wieder los rennen und Live Debugging machen. Das ist halt der Preis für diese sehr individuelle Lösung für weitere Comment Types.

Ich vermisse ebenfalls schmerzlich dass eben keine Bilder oder generell Attachments in Kommentaren eingebunden werden können. Das wirft zwar wieder neue Fragen auf, doch bei der Geschwindigkeit mit der sich WP weiter entwickelt kann man ja schon froh sein dass überhaupt schon Emoji funktionieren.

Manchmal.

Also im Titel zum Beispiel eher noch nicht – da fallen einige IndieWeb Sachen dann auf die Nase 😛

Die (Twitter) Posse by Matthias PfefferleMatthias Pfefferle (notiz.blog)
Im modernen Sprachgebrauch wird der Begriff [Posse] in übertragenem Sinn […] genutzt, um als grotesk empfundene Vorgänge in Gesellschaft und Politik zu beschreiben.https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posse Wer sich (aus gegebenem Anlass) sorgen um Twitter macht, sollte sich mal mit der etwas anderen P...

I want more control over what my microphone picks up on screen share in video conferences or during streaming but I don’t want to buy a hardware mixer. I also want to be able to disable the microphone with a hotkey but it doesn’t have any physical switch. So achieve all this I utilise PipeWire to run a bunch of virtual devices that I can control via pavucontrol and obs later. Video conferences get this as “default device” so they don’t get a chance to mess up my audio setup (looking at you Teams). The steps are the same for PulseAudio if you don’t have PipeWire (yet).

#!/bin/sh
# setup virtual device intended for monitoring
pactl load-module module-null-sink sink_name="BekoBlaster" device.icon_name="audio-card-analog" node.nick="BekoBlaster" node.description="BekoBlaster-16" sink_properties=device.description="BekoBlaster-16"
# setup virtual MIC so intended monitoring device can be recorded from as MIC
pactl load-module module-remap-source master="BekoBlaster.monitor" node.nick="BekoMic" device.icon_name="audio-input-microphone" source_name="BekoMic-16" source_properties=device.description="BekoMic-16"
# IMPORTANT:
# RUN `pavucontrol` => Select Tab Record => Set BekoMic-16 input to "Monitor of BekoBlaster-16"

The 16 is not important. It’s just my kind of humour as my first Linux PC had a SoundBlaster16 😛 It also is a pattern sufficient enough so I don’t mix this up with the zoo of real microphones or audio sinks attached to my computer.

This is already sufficient enough so that everything played on the device BekoBlaster-16 can be recorded on the BekoMic-16 again, that I select as input microphone for Browser (video conferences) or Discord at this point. This can be done with pavucontrol – or later in obs.

This isn’t enough, of course. In case of e.g. playing music (or streaming a game) I’d also want to hear the sound myself too. For this I create an additional null sink and a combined sink. With this approach I can later fine tune in obs what gets recorded to which audio track (where audio track 1 is the one used for streaming) and what ends up on the BekoBlaster-16, that acts as my monitor and due to the remapped source also as virtual mic.

# setup virtual device for games (or whatever OBS should record)
pactl load-module module-null-sink sink_name="OBS-Blaster" device.icon_name="audio-card-analog" node.nick="OBS-Blaster" node.description="OBS-Blaster" sink_properties=device.description="OBS-Blaster"
# OPTIONAL setup a combined sink so I can enjoy game sound while OBS gets a copy
pactl load-module module-combine-sink slaves="OBS-Blaster,bluez_output.10_4F_A8_84_18_01.a2dp-sink" node.nick="OBS-Blaster-AND-Headphones" node.description="OBS-Blaster-AND-Headphones" sink_properties=device.description="OBS-Blaster-AND-Headphones"
# Important tools to manipulate: `pw-cli list-objects`, `pw-cli destroy $id`, `pactl list short | grep module`, `pactl unload-module $id`

With this (and my headset connected) it starts to get crowded in my device list.

As you can hear err… hopefully see: The sink OBS-Blaster-AND-Headphones is now selected for playing music which results in the music being played on the next virtual sink OBS-Blaster and my h.ear (MDR-100ABN) headphones. The same could be done with the BekoBlaster-16, of course, but bear with me. We still don’t have any real microphone added to the mix and while this can be done with PipeWire or PulseAudio alone too I need this usually with video included too so obs it is.

Here the most important setting is the monitoring device, which is the BekoBlaster-16 from the beginning, that can be used as microphone in e.g. Discord later again.

Next is the set-up of the mixer where I’m interested in 4 devices only:

  • The BekoMic-16 without monitor (it is the monitor so this would result in an echo chamber) and optional track 5 for recording (so I’ll know later how the mix sounded – but this is never used for video editing later).
  • The desktop audio without monitor, so random system sounds (or other Discord voices!) don’t make it to any stream. It can be recorded on it’s own track tho in case I fcked up or need a reference later on during editing.
  • The Mic/Aux, which represents the real microphone used. It is echoed on the monitor microphone and on track 1 (send to my streaming server) and on track 2 so I have a separate microphone track later to work with in post edit.
  • The OBS-Blaster, which usually represents the game I’m playing. It is echoed on the monitor microphone and on track 1 (send to my streaming server) and on track 4 so I have a separate game/music track later to work with in post edit.

This way I can control in great detail what ends up on the Discord / a video conference / game streaming, while I get the full power of obs scenes (where I also do my greenscreen mixing), mute microphones as I see fit and have some material to work with later when I decide to make a video on stuff. Here I did set up Discord to read from the virtual BekoMic-16 and output to my headphones only (where no recording in OBS is done) – so perfect for most Discord / video conference sessions.

Don’t mind the flipped video preview. That’s perfectly fine and will look right for the viewers later. This is by the way the virtual camera sink feature of obs and the v4l2loopback kernel driver that I also read from in video conferences instead of the real webcam. This way I can also control exactly what the webcam shows – zoom / crop included.

The whole mess looks like this visualised in helvum, a patchbay for PipeWire.

Most of this explains itself. The WEBRTC VoiceEngine is the recording of Discord. Other devices may float around but are not used at the moment of this snapshot.

More on this and proper documentation: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/wikis/Virtual-Devices