![]() ![]() I’m using the “cron” utility to schedule grabbing images once per minute and assembling daily videos, and I have gotten cron working under Cygwin before, but I remember it being a bit of a pain. I haven’t tried any of this under Windows myself. ffmpeg might need to be downloaded from . Under Windows, you may be able to get these (and curl, from part one) through Cygwin. Notably, I’m using the “gdate” command to get GNU date’s behavior rather than the BSD version’s. I also installed the “coreutils” package, which gets me GNU versions of a number of command line utilities which may work differently under OS X than they do in linux. Using brew, I installed ffmpeg, a very handy video processing utility. ![]() I’m doing this on an iMac running OS X, on which I’ve installed the Homebrew package manager. In this part, I’ll describe what I’m doing with those to make time lapse videos. In Part One I showed you how to get the snapshot URL for your Nest camera, so you could get a full resolution still image from the camera. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |