From 890b34bcc1a6b4073d1e512b1386634f7bc5ea52 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "Adam T. Carpenter" <atc@53hor.net>
Date: Wed, 21 Apr 2021 22:57:39 -0400
Subject: unified posts dir, until I can figure out makefile sub-subdirs.
 makefile auto-generates index

---
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-<!DOCTYPE html>
-<html>
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-      property="og:title"
-      content="Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!"
-    />
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-    <title>53hornet ➙ Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!</title>
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-    </nav>
-
-    <article>
-      <h1>Offloading GoPro Footage the Easy Way!</h1>
-
-      <p>
-        Transferring files off of most cameras to a Linux computer isn't all
-        that difficult. The exception is my GoPro Hero 4 Black. For 4th of July
-        week I took a bunch of video with the GoPro, approximately 20 MP4 files,
-        about 3GB each. The annoying thing about the GoPro's USB interface is
-        you need additional software to download everything through the cable.
-        The camera doesn't just show up as a USB filesystem that you can mount.
-        The GoPro does have a micro-SD card but I was away from home and didn't
-        have any dongles or adapters. Both of these solutions also mean taking
-        the camera out of its waterproof case and off of its mount. So here's
-        what I did.
-      </p>
-
-      <p>
-        GoPro cameras, after the Hero 3, can open up an ad-hoc wireless network
-        that lets you browse the GoPro's onboard files through an HTTP server.
-        This means you can open your browser and scroll through the files on the
-        camera at an intranet address, <code>10.5.5.9</code>, and download them
-        one by one by clicking every link on every page. If you have a lot of
-        footage on there it kinda sucks. So, I opened up the manual for
-        <code>wget</code>. I'm sure you could get really fancy with some of the
-        options but the only thing I cared about was downloading every single
-        MP4 video off of the camera, automatically. I did not want to download
-        any of the small video formats or actual HTML files. Here's what I used:
-      </p>
-
-      <pre>
-        <code>
-sh wget --recursive --accept "*.MP4" http://10.5.5.9:8080/
-		</code>
-      </pre>
-
-      <p>
-        This tells <code>wget</code> to download all of the files at the GoPro's
-        address recursively and skips any that don't have the MP4 extension. Now
-        I've got a directory tree with all of my videos in it. And the best part
-        is I didn't have to install the dinky GoPro app on my laptop. Hopefully
-        this helps if you're looking for an easy way to migrate lots of footage
-        without manually clicking through the web interface or installing
-        additional software. The only downside is if you're moving a whole lot
-        of footage, it's not nearly as quick as just moving files off the SD
-        card. So I'd shoot for using the adapter to read off the card first and
-        only use this if that's not an option, such as when the camera is
-        mounted and you don't want to move it.
-      </p>
-
-      <p>Some things I would like to change/add:</p>
-
-      <ul>
-        <li>
-          Download all image files as well; should be easy, just another
-          <code>--accept</code>
-        </li>
-        <li>Initiate parallel downloads</li>
-        <li>
-          Clean up the directory afterwards so I just have one level of depth
-        </li>
-      </ul>
-
-      <p>
-        I could probably write a quick and dirty shell script to do all of this
-        for me but I use the camera so infrequently that it's probably not even
-        worth it.
-      </p>
-    </article>
-  </body>
-</html>
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