Re: Download Or Upload

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Wan Cabiness

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Jul 12, 2024, 3:17:53 AM7/12/24
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Upload is an American science fiction comedy drama television series created by Greg Daniels.[1] The series premiered on May 1, 2020, on Amazon Prime Video and was renewed for a second season.[2] The second season premiered on March 11, 2022; it had seven episodes, three fewer than the first.[3] In May 2022, the series was renewed for a third season,[4] which premiered on October 20, 2023 and consists of eight episodes.[5] In March 2024, the series was renewed for a fourth and final season.[6]

In 2033, humans can "upload" themselves into a virtual afterlife of their choosing. When computer programmer Nathan Brown dies prematurely, he is uploaded to the very expensive Lakeview, but then finds himself under the thumb of his possessive, still-living girlfriend Ingrid. As Nathan adjusts to the pros and cons of digital heaven, he bonds with Nora, his living customer service rep. Nora struggles with the pressures of her job, her dying father who does not want to be uploaded, and her growing feelings for Nathan while slowly coming to believe that Nathan was murdered.

download or upload


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On September 8, 2017, Amazon announced it had ordered a pilot for a new single-camera comedy series created by Greg Daniels.[14] On July 28, 2018, Amazon announced it had given the production an order for a first season of ten episodes. Daniels and Howard Klein are executive producers, and the series is produced by 3 Arts Entertainment.[15] On May 8, 2020, Amazon renewed the series for a second season, which premiered March 11, 2022.[2][3] On May 11, 2022, the series was renewed for a third season.[4] In October 2023, Daniels mentioned in an interview with Collider that he was hopeful for a fourth season and that the writing process would begin during November 2023.[16] In March 2024, Amazon renewed the series for a fourth and final season.[6]

Some exterior photography for the Lakeview virtual reality world was shot at Mohonk Mountain House and Preserve in New Paltz, New York, including images of the hotel, groundskeeper, and lake. A small number of interior shots, including rooms at the hotel, were also filmed on location.[20]

Upload received positive reviews. On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season has an approval rating of 88% with an average score of 6.9 out of 10 based on reviews from 56 critics. The website's critical consensus is, "Though Upload at times suffers from tonal overload, witty writing and a winsome cast make it an afterlife worth living."[23] On Metacritic, the season has a weighted average score of 67 out of 100, based on 22 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[24]

The third season has received an approval rating of 88% with an average score of 7.3/10 based on 18 critics on Rotten Tomatoes. The website's critical consensus is, "Equal parts more convoluted and sophisticated than ever before, Upload's techno satire continues to take on more human dimension."[27] On Metacritic, it received a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on 6 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[28]

I am new to Stack Overflow, and I have asked about 5 questions so far. I have uploaded images of my code on most of my questions. On two separate occasions, two different users advised me not to upload images of code and outputs. One even jokingly said that, every time an image of code is uploaded, a kitten somewhere dies.

Instead of using images for code, copy and paste the code as text into your question or answer, select it, and hit the code button in the toolbar (it looks like ) or press Ctrl+K. (If you wish to format it by hand, you can insert four spaces before each line of code, or use code fences.)

Similarly, copy and paste any other textual data relevant to the question - such as commands typed at a terminal prompt, errors (or exception stack traces), logs, configuration, or project files - rather than showing an image.

If the text was output to a terminal, it's usually better to format it the same way as the code - it may have been designed to use "ASCII art" assuming a monospace font, and may contain characters with special meaning in Markdown/HTML. Otherwise, consider using block-quote formatting instead.

Questions that contain images instead of code are generally closed for lacking debugging details - the image content is simply not taken into consideration, because it isn't properly usable as described below. Once such a question is edited to include a minimal, reproducible example in plain text form, it can be reopened.

I need to upload a file to the Dropbox of another user. I did not have an account, but in the process of trying to do this, I opened one. The other user sent me a link to his Dropbox, but I don't think it was an actual "request" for files-- it says I have the right to edit his folder. I have tried to upload my file from a flash drive to his folder about 15 times. Each time, the screen says the file is "uploading" and there is a bar showing the progress--but then the entire thing disappears and the folder is still empty.

Basically, if they shared a folder with you, you can upload files into it up to the limit of your own space. To send them a file that's larger than your space, just have them send you a File Request instead. You don't need an account to send a file through a request. If they're a Basic user, there's a 2GB limit files sent through a request.

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My suggestion is that frustrated users like me simply close their account with Dropbox and use one of the 100 other MORE RELIABLE, LESS KLUNKY, LESS SPAM Marketing barrages. For me, I chose a business class product, which is what I'll use (Citrix Sharefile) and a link to my colleague to come and download the two little Microsoft Office files I have for him/them.

Good luck, Richard. I hope you ultimately get an answer that's simpler than someone who wants to instruct you how to write code to customize and modify Dropbox and spend the next 20 years of your life simply uploading/sharing a file with a Dropbox user.

So my church pays for 9 TB. They have lots of folders and lot of people that take pictures for them. But I can only upload 2 GB (cumulative over years) to THEIR 9 TB Dropbox because I only have 2 GB of storage? That is the worst business model I have seen as a semi-pro photographer.

Sounds like a workaround may be for them to only share a single folder with me (rather than each event I shoot), and they will then have to move the files out of this temporary "transfer" folder, that way I never have more than 2GB of "shared" files on their 9 TB Dropbox?

Or even easier, switch them to a more professional storage option that allows any number of contributors to upload content up to the limit of the storage the church pays for (which would seem like a common sense approach)

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The issue I'm facing is uploading Reels formatted videos through Hubspot's CSM and they only accept videos that fit between 1.91:1 and 4:5 aspect ratio. Does anyone know the solution besides uploading these types of videos manually?

As a social media manager, I am facing an issue uploading Instagram Reels videos through Hubspot's CMS, as it only accepts videos within a specific aspect ratio. To resolve this, I suggest using a video editing software to resize the videos before uploading or using a third-party integration found in the Hubspot Marketplace. This will ensure that our videos are visually appealing on Instagram.

One solution would be to use a video editing software to resize the video to fit within the aspect ratio requirements before uploading it to Hubspot's CSM. This can be done by cropping or adding black bars to the video. You can use open source software like Blender or Lightworks or paid software like Adobe Premiere Pro or Final Cut Pro. Another option would be to use a third-party integration that can automatically resize the video before uploading to Hubspot's CSM. Such integrations can be found in the Hubspot Marketplace.

It's mind blowing to me that this feature is not already available on HubSpot. So many other platforms have already udated to offer this feature, including Loomly, and recently Later. As a marketer, I find it interesting that the HubSpot blog is actually directing people away from HubSpot to platforms like Later. I really hope this feature becomes available soon. -instagram-reels

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