Click the Apps menu, which will lead you to a page where Windows will show you the apps stored on your PC. Reorganize the list by file size to see which apps consume the most space, then click the app and select Uninstall to get rid of it. Apps typically consume gobs of gigabytes at a time, so look here first for unwanted old apps that consume space. Filter by file size to make the task easier. Clicking the Temporary files subheading opens up a wealth of files that even Windows thinks are unnecessary, from temporary Internet files to the Recycle bin.
Click the Remove files button at the top to clear everything out. There will be some that say that you should keep older Windows Update files in case you need to roll back a flawed update, but this is rare. The OneDrive subheading is a bit more subjective. But it keeps a placeholder—sort of a file bookmark on your local hard drive. This can be YouTube, Dailymotion, Facebook or other website that has video streaming..
Open 4K Video Downloader. It has a green icon with an image that resembles a cloud. Click the icon to open 4K Video Downloader. Click Smart Mode. This opens the Smart Mode menu, which allows you to select what format, quality, and language you want to download your videos in.
Select a format. Use the first drop-down menu to select a format.. Select the quality. It also supports 60 frames-per-second at p, p, and 4K. Select "Best Quality" to download the best possible quality.
Select you language. Use the last two drop-down menu's to select the video language and subtitle language. Click Ok. This saves your settings. Click Paste Link. It's the green icon in the upper-right corner. This automatically pastes the link into 4K Video Downloader and starts downloading the video.
When the video download is complete, you can find the downloaded videos files in your Videos folder. Method 3. Understand the limitations of screen recordings. Screen recording is a solution to wanting to download a protected video e.
OBS Studio will also record your mouse cursor and any pop-ups or buffering that may occur during video playback. You'll also need a subscription to the service in question to be able to access these videos. Also be aware that screen recording video from a paid streaming service may violate the terms of service for that service provider.
It may also be illegal in your country. Download and install Mozilla Firefox. Most video streaming services like Netflix and Hulu have copyright protection in their videos. When you try to screen capture videos from these services, you will see a black screen when viewing the recorded video.
Open the installer file in your web browser or Downloads folder. Click Yes on Mac, drag the Firefox icon to the Applications folder. Download and install OBS. OBS is free app recording and streaming software.
It is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. Open the Install file in your web browser or Downloads folder. Click Next. Click I Agree. Uncheck the plugin box if you like. Click Install Click Finish when prompted. Drag the OBS app to the Applications folder. Open Firefox. It has an orange and purple icon that resembles a fox in the shape of a flame. Go to a video streaming website and sign in. Enter the web address for a video streaming site like Netflix, Hulu, or other in your web browser.
Then sign in using the username and password associated with your account. Open OBS Studio. OBS has a black round icon with three cycles on it. Click OK if prompted. This will accept the terms of use and bring you to the main OBS Studio window. Click Yes on the "Auto-Configuration Wizard" window. This will bring up a window. To complete the setup wizard: Check the "Optimize just for recording" box.
Click Apply Settings. If you prefer to set your own settings, click No instead. Open a protected video. Go to a site like Netflix or Hulu and sign in with your account credentials.
You can also use this technique to capture live streaming video from YouTube, Facebook, or Twitch as it happens. It's at the bottom of OBS in the "Sources" panel. Click Window Capture. It's at the bottom of the list of capture sources. Type a name for the source. You can name it after the app you are capturing video from to make it easier to reference.
It doesn't really matter what you call it. Select "Firefox" as the Window. Use the drop-down menu next to "Window" to select Firefox. It will be listed along with the website you have open. Select Firefox to use that as the capture display. This will start recording the source you have selected.
Play the video in Firefox. Now that you have the streaming app recording, click the play button on the video to start the video playback. OBS will record the entire video as it plays. It's recommended you do a short test recording of a video to make sure everything is working properly before you try to record an entire movie or TV show. Full-screen the video. Click the "fullscreen" icon at the bottom of the video player. In some cases, you can also press "F11" to full-screen the video.
This will stop recording and save the video. You can go to your video by clicking File and then clicking Show Recordings in the drop-down menu. By default, video recordings can be found in your Videos folder. Method 4. Game Bar will also record your mouse cursor and any pop-ups or buffering that may occur during video playback. Click Yes. Click the icon in the Window Start menu to open Firefox. This opens the Game Bar on Windows. This can be used to record screen captures.
Click the widgets menu. It's the icon that has four lines with four dots next to them. It's at the top of the game bar. Click Capture. This displays the screen capture controls. Click the "Record" button.
It's the button with the circle in the capture controls. This starts a screen recording. You will see the timer and stop button appear in a separate panel to the right. Play a video. Use the web interface in Firefox to navigate to a video you want to watch and click it. Click the Play button in the video to begin the video playback. Game Bar will record your video as it plays. Try to ensure there are no other windows or disturbance on the screen as the video playback plays.
Game Bar will record any other windows that opens, as well as your mouse cursor and any sounds from any other apps. Click the "Stop" button. Now, months later, he decided to resurrect his website, and wanted the stuff from the old site again so that he could get up and running quickly. Where does it go? In other words, where do websites go when they die?
I think a lot of newcomers to web design have this vague misconception that websites use some exotic futuristic technology that they are unfamiliar with. This leads to erroneous notions like building a website being an arcane art and this recently expressed hope that an old website can still be recovered intact, in entirety, long after it had been discontinued.
In reality, the pages on websites are just simple files on a computer. For example, the article that you're reading now is just a simple file similar to a document you type in Microsoft Word that is placed on a computer located somewhere in the world. The reason you can read it from your home or office or wherever is that the aforesaid computer is connected to the same network of devices that you are connected to that is, the Internet.
It's similar to how a telephone works. So how does a website typically get removed from the Internet? Now, I don't mean irrelevant ways like a power failure, flood, earthquake or what-have-you. Obviously these will also remove websites, and in the case of natural disasters, possibly even whole computers, buildings and people. Since a website is just a bunch of files documents residing on a computer somewhere, it gets removed the same way you remove unwanted files from your computer.
You simply delete them. Now, some of you who are only familiar with desktop or laptop computers are probably thinking, "Oh, there's hope then. Maybe we can get it out of the Recycle Bin or Trash". However, you are thinking like a user who owns a computer that exists solely to serve your needs.
Computers that are used for websites are busy things. A single computer can hold hundreds of websites. A business that runs such computers is not going to keep the deleted files in a recycle bin for someone who is no longer a paying customer. When they delete files, they don't do a pseudo-delete where the files are simply moved to a recycle bin. They truly delete them, and the space is reclaimed for others who are paying for it.
All respectable web hosts the businesses that run the computers holding your website have backups of the sites they store on their computers. These backups are created so that if the computer with your website fails as all machines are wont to do eventually , the web host can quickly restore your website from the archive onto a different computer, and get it up and running quickly.
You may think that this means you have a chance to recover your old abandoned site. That is, if your relationship with your old web host is still amicable, you may be considering asking them if you can get your old files back. That may or may not work. Web hosts probably don't keep backups extending very far back in time. Their backups are made to serve the very specific purpose of making sure they can quickly put your current site back on the Internet should their hardware fail.
They are not a museum, intent on preserving history. As such, it's quite possible that if you are asking about a site that has not been on their system for more than a few months, they may not be able to help you since a backup containing your site may no longer exist. However, if your site was only recently abandoned, and you still have a cordial relationship with your old web host, there's probably no harm asking.
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