9 comments

  • tnixc 13 days ago
    https://cobolt.tools is free, open source, and more feature complete. It’s my go-to and I think it’s awesome.
    • exogen 13 days ago
      Unfortunately it doesn't seem to support Instagram stories, which is the type of media I find myself wanting to save the most.

      OP: in case you weren't aware, websites that do this have been facing legal challenges recently, with some being shut down. I suspect that's part of the reason there's room in the market for yours... while it lasts :(

      • aprilnya 13 days ago
        Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t — I remember seeing a post on Cobalt’s Twitter saying they fixed Instagram support, and then just a few hours later a post saying it broke again…
      • bojanstef4 12 days ago
        Thanks for the heads up
    • aprilnya 13 days ago
      Typoed link, the correct one is https://cobalt.tools
      • nadermx 13 days ago
        Cobalt is pretty awesome. Like their design
    • andrea81 13 days ago
      Server not found
  • paxys 13 days ago
    My advice – it is perfectly fine to do this as a random fun side project with no real expectations, but if you are a solo founder looking for product market fit for a serious product I don't understand the rationale behind going on all on something that is fundamentally illegal and/or against the ToS of the services you are relying on. You will be cut off at moment's notice if your work actually does turn out to be popular. What are you expecting here exactly? To start a company? To make profits?
  • bojanstef4 13 days ago
  • crindy 13 days ago
    Why say "any social media" when it's only Youtube and TikTok?
    • dylan604 13 days ago
      They already admitted they struggle with marketing
      • bojanstef4 12 days ago
        isn't that what marketing is? inflating your product with words
        • crindy 12 days ago
          Nope. Underpromise, overdeliver. Build something so useful that you don't need to inflate it to get it noticed.
          • dylan604 12 days ago
            sure, that's what it should be, but that's not what it is.
  • thot_experiment 13 days ago
    just put yt-dlp on your path and you can do this without sharing your data with some weird SEO garbager

    it's so lamentable that putting a binary on your path is too technical for most people these days as the user experience is so so much better than any other option, anytime I want to share a short form video i can Ctrl + L -> Ctrl + C to get the link, Ctrl + R to summon a command prompt, type `ytdl` Shift + Insert to paste the url and then I can drag the resultant file into whatever sharing tool I want to use, guaranteeing it's never going to be taken offline and whoever I'm sharing with doesn't need to have an account or solve a captcha or something else dumb

    • crispyambulance 13 days ago
      I agree with you that yt-dlp is the most practical way to do this stuff, but that simply isn't clear to most folks.

      Pretend you don't know how to download videos, the first thing you do is google "how to download youtube videos". The result? A whole lot of bad advice-- sketchy websites, clickbait videos, advice to pay for youtube premium, warnings that it's illegal and that google can cut off your access, vlc player can do it apparently, and then finally inside a reddit thread someone writes "yt-dlp is the best" (nothing else, no link). One would think that google itself has an interest in keeping this information away from people :-).

      I can't even remember how I first found it myself!

    • anta40 13 days ago
      I previously used yt-dl, then yt-dlp. So for it works nice.

      But, CLI only can be intimidating for non-tech users. Let's say there are multiple high resolutions of a video: 1280x720, 1920x1080, 2650x1440, 3840x2160 etc. By default, yt-dlp will fetch the highest one, which is 3840x2160. I want 1920x1080 instead. What I do is fetch the 1920x1080 video and the highest quality audio, then join those with ffmpeg.

      A GUI to easily do that is definitely a nice addition.

      • thot_experiment 13 days ago

            ytdl -f "bestvideo[height<=1440]+bestaudio/best[height<=1440]" --add-metadata --no-mtime --sponsorblock-remove default %* -o C:\tmp\ytdl%%(title)s-%%(id)s.%%(ext)s --exec ""c:\Program Files\VideoLAN\VLC\vlc.exe" --one-instance --playlist-enqueue {}"
        
        This is the batch file I use on my gaming/media machine, you can season to taste (replace 1440 w/ 1080)
    • bojanstef4 12 days ago
      yt-dlp is great, fortunately for us not everyone is a software engineer
    • getwiththeprog 13 days ago
      Good advice, thank you.
    • aaron695 13 days ago
      [dead]
  • Waterluvian 13 days ago
    I wonder if the top FAQ question should be “how can this be free?”
  • xnx 13 days ago
    Does this use yt-dlp?
  • lxgr 13 days ago
    What's Double Subtitles? Sounds interesting!
    • bojanstef4 12 days ago
      The TLDR is: an AI subtitle editor for videos.

      The longer story is:

      I started working on an AI-empowered subtitle editor in 2020 before the GPT boom. The idea was great but unfortunately my work-status didn't allow me to launch. So I waited until everything was proper, and then launched Double Subtitles late 2023.

      I'm trying to figure out how to get my first customers.

      A few differentiators with Double Subtitles are:

      1. The speech-to-text response time is industry leading 2. It supports up to 1 hour long videos while most competitors support 5-10 minutes max

  • kinduff 13 days ago
    Congrats on the launch! Your oembed endpoint is pretty fast!

    Would love to hear some technical details about your product.

    • bojanstef4 12 days ago
      Hey thanks! I'm happy to answer technical questions, I'm on Telegram at the same username I use here (without the 4).