App | Source Image | Method for Darkening |
---|---|---|
Books | From Apple's official reference image 'Open In' button (for those websites with the button that says 'Open In Apple Books'), which stores the logos of Apple's apps in SVGs, to look good at any resolution. This will be referred to as Open In. | I changed the background to be pure black, and nothing else. This will be referred to as the Books Trick. |
Music | Open In. | Changed the background to black (Music Trick). |
News | Open In. | Music Trick. |
Apple TV | Open In. | Changed background to pure black instead of dark grey. |
iMessages | From a Wikimedia Commons PNG image. | I retraced it using shapes in Affinity Photo, and used the Books trick. The ellipse is good. The arm may be off slightly, but I don't think it's crucial. Using the Books Trick represents the colour of messages within the apps better. I also made a blue one, but the contrast isn't as good. |
iTunes | Open In. | I made two. Either keep the star as it is or use the Books Trick. (Also, on request of u/kindredcashew98, made one with a gradient background and non-gradient interior.) |
Notes | An Apple webpage with many app icons as PNGs. | Reconstructed manually. Inverted the paper, lines and dots. Then doubled the brightness of lines and dots, because inverting them apparently made them harder to see.. |
Podcasts | Open In. | Books Trick. |
Wikipedia | The 'W' in the SVG version of the Wikipedia logo. | I couldn't find the official app icon, so I made my own. It's slightly larger than the W in the official app, because when choosing the size I decided that if you measured the total width of the W divided by the width of the icon, and assumed that the height was the same as the width, it would be exactly three quarters of the size. I don't know what I was thinking, but the end result is clearer and, dare I say it, nicer than the official icon (which doesn't even use the same font as the original logo), so I put a light mode one in as well. |
Safari | Wikimedia Commons, which only had the macOS icon. | Recentered and recoloured to match the iOS colour gradient (lighter going up to the top, instead of into the centre). The blue in the compass may, therefore, be slightly off, but I don't think it matters. The background is black, as are the markers around the edge of the compass. There's also one with the previously white south pointer being black, in case you want even less whiteness. There are Dark Mode versions of the macOS Safari icons (including the Technology Preview), but for those you need to go into 'Get Info' and replace the icon in the top-left corner of the pop-up, but that changes it throughout the system (and with no loss, because it's converted to a .icns sourced from a 10242 .png sourced from a .svg). |
App Store | Wikimedia Commons. | Books Trick. This does, however, make it look like the App Store Connect icon, but I didn't want to change it to make everything inconsistent, so I made the App Store Connect as well, in black-on-blue. |
Wikimedia Commons. | Books Trick. | |
Maps. | Wikimedia Commons. | I recoloured all of the different parts to match what it looks like inside Maps with Dark Mode in iOS 13. |
FaceTime | Wikimedia Commons. | Books Trick. It's not based on the latest version of the icon, which I couldn't find, so if you can't bear looking at a less rounded video recorder outline with a lens and a button, you've been warned. |
Numbers | Wikimedia Commons. | Books Trick. |
Camera | I got this icon via what I think is a piracy website, so I'm not sharing it, but I think Apple would be okay with users editting app icons and giving credit to Apple for creating the original ones. | I made the camera light-grey for more contrast with the black background, but then the bright yellow flash had less contrast, so I made it dark yellow. |
Photos | Piracy. | I made a simple formula for each primary colour that removes the white tint and adds a black tint (assuming each colour blob is 50% opacity). I think it looks too transparent, but is definitely an improvement. |
Phone | Piracy. | Books trick. |
Health | Piracy. | Books trick. |
Stocks | Piracy. | I made the background black instead of dark grey. It seems to be the older icon, though, where the bars are slightly more stretched horizontally. Does anyone have a newer icon? |
Piracy. | Books trick. | |
What'sApp | Piracy. | Books trick. |
Settings | Piracy. | Changed the background to black, removed the case around the outside and kept the gears as they were (with the small one apparently darker, which it isn't for me on the iOS 13 beta). This one looks extremely nice. |
Weather | Piracy. | I kept the transparency of the sun and cloud, but changed the background to pure black. I know u/Wilson_Boi_101's post had more creative icons, but this saves more battery life on OLED displays, as well as reducing eye strain and making it look clearer and less noisy. |
Wallet | Piracy. | Changed the background to pure black and inverted and doubled the brightness of the wallet case to make it dark grey, but still standing out. |
Reminders | Piracy (iOS 12 icon) | I reconstructed the iOS 13 icon from this and a screenshot from my beta iPhone, and inverted the colours of the lines and made the background black. |
Home | Piracy. | Music Trick. |
Pushover | Their website, but then below it, they said that you're not allowed to modify it. I hope they don't sue me, and instead see that I'm giving them free publicity and more user engagement. | Books Trick. |
Google Earth | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Trick. |
TestFlight | A low-quality 1282 PNG. Does anyone have an SVG? | I badly reconstructed it, but it's difficult to tell from the size in the Home Screen. |
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, Publisher, Access, Teams and Skype. | Wikimedia Commons. | I got the desktop icons, because the mobile ones are just those inside big, white app-boxes. I reconstructed these white boxes, but black. I didn't know the exact proportions, so I used 3/4ths of the width and height of the box. It looks very nice, like everything else. |
Contacts | Screenshot from iOS 13 iPhone. | I reconstructed this one very well, I think. The only difference is that the top-right tab and the big bit on the left are now inverted colours, but the shadows on them still exist. There's also a Pure Black Dark Mode, for those of you who are secretly Craig Federighi and would like a Black Celebration. |
Wikimedia Commons. | Music Trick. | |
Opera | Their Website. | Unfortunately, the only vector format provided was an EPS, which is this crazy format that Affinity Photo turns to greyscale. So, you can have your Dark Mode Opera icon, if you're okay with it being greyscale. |
Assembly Line (AssemblyLineGame) | The low-quality, intensely antialiased image on the Google Play Store. | I remade the icon perfectly, to the last pixel, using Affinity Photo Rectangles. It's apparently an odd number of pixels wide, so I centred it by upscaling the image to four times the size, then shifting it one pixel. I also provided the original icon, as well as using the Music Trick. Ironically, it's 2KB, 1/16th of the 32KB of the antialiased one. I don't know how many people still have the app after it was taken off the App Store, but you Android users could probably make a skin with this. |
Google, it's Authenticator and Translate | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. The 'G' is now larger, according to my 75% width model, the Authenticator icon is approximately the same, and Translate, being close to a square, is much larger, almost touching the edges. Translate's light-grey paper is now dark-grey. |
Adblock Plus | Their Press Kit. | Books Method, icon seems approximately the same size. |
1Password | Their Press Kit. | Inverted everything uncoloured. I only got the round icon, though, not the app's icon, so the background is pure black until they reply to my eMail, then I'll make another one. |
MiniWiki | The Wikipedia icon, but with the app's blue. | Books Method. It's now the official Wikipedia font, instead of the font before, which was like the Wikipedia one but more boring, with three arms instead of four. |
Audible | Wikimedia Commons. | I used the Books method, but couldn't find the gradient they used in their app icon, so I used their SVG logo. |
Crystal Adblocker | A screenshot of the icon, then remaking it in Affinity Photo. | The colour is from Mail, it's a perfect square with two right-angled triangles above and below it, so that the square takes half of the height. |
SleepWatch | My genius intellect. | It's a perfect white moon on a black background. And it's now a realistic crescent instead of an eclipse. |
Slack | Their Press Kit and a nice eMail conversation with a representative. | They have a logo sourced from a 1515 grid and one sourced from 1919. I made these in Affinity Photo and made icons from those. |
VLC | Their very detailed desktop logo. | I reduced it to a silhouette and added an outline. |
Remote | A screenshot of the iOS icon. | I made an SVG based on the screenshot, recoloured it and scaled it up. |
Calculator | Looking at the iOS icon. | It turns out you can make it from the Remote icon extremely easily. |
WatchPlayer | Looking at the iOS icon. | It's slightly thicker than the actual icon, but I like it. It's got bigger breaks in the circle, as well as a rounded, hollow play button. |
Files | An Apple PNG of the iOS icon. | I reconstructed it. It isn't quite perfect, and uses a distorted rounded square instead of whatever Apple did to get the smooth gradient to diagonal and back for the tab at the top of the folder, but other than that, it's pretty much an exact copy. The paper's still white, being paper, but the white background was the thing that burnt our eyes. |
Shazam | Their logo on Wikimedia Commons. | I removed the text and made the background and white 'S' thing black. |
Google Home, OneDrive, Dropbox | Their logo on Wikimedia Commons. | Music Trick. |
Find My | A screenshot of the app icon. | Music Trick, but also reconstructing it (probably very lossfully), making the white outline to the blue thing black and making a second sonar radius line around the outside to increase the contrast against the black background. |
RadioPlayer, Life Cycle | Screenshots of their icons. | I reconstructed them and used the Books Trick for both of them. |
IMDb | Wikimedia Commons | Books Trick. |
YouTube | Wikimedia Commons | Books Trick for the outside, then I made one with a black and a white play button inside, depending on how much of a black celebration you'd like to have. (We've gotten to the point where the only people still reading understand that Craig Federighi reference.) |
Tube Map - London Underground | The icon in the web App Store. | I changed all white to black and vice versa, but also reconstructed it. LONDON. |
Santander | Their website. | I hope to expand to all banks, but this is a good place to start. Books Trick. |
EE | Wikimedia Commons. | I hope to expand to all cellular apps, but this is a good place to start. Music Trick. |
Google Calendar | Wikimedia Commons. | Music method, but blackened the holes in the top and changed the text so it still has some greyness at the bottom to show the brightness, but at the top, it's completely black. |
Google Keep | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method, also made the lightbulb black. |
Google Maps | Wikimedia Commons. | I apologise if it's not exact, I reconstructed it from a non-iOS shaped one. (Maps apps always try to show off, and accidentally make them difficult to reconstruct when they get them wrong.) I made the grass and tarmac darker and changed all white parts to black. |
Wikimedia Commons. | Sorry for making the app for normies, please blame u/Bricknight for the idea. Fortunately, Affinity Photo lets you scale gradients' areas of effect without scaling their internal gradient colours via the Node tool, so I didn't get any distortion in the internal colours, I just extended it to have square corners (because iOS icon shapes vary per-device, and this makes it easier). I highly encourage you to look at the top-left corner, because it's much bluer than you'd think. Anyway, you can either use the regular icon with white switched for black, or the better, more AMOLED-power-saving one, with colour where the white outline would be and blackness where the colour would be. Affinity Photo's Subtract tool is very nice for things like this. | |
Facebook and Facebook Messenger | Wikimedia Commons. | Sorry for making the app for normie boomers, blame u/Bricknight again. For Facebook Messenger, I changed all white to black, for Facebook, I used the Android icon (because Wikimedia Commons didn't have the iOS one), extended the bottom from the previous peasant circle (which is an off-brand iOS squircle, just like Android is an off-brand iOS), removed the exterior (which is a useless solid-fill) and copied over the Facebook Messenger gradient. |
Roku | Wikimedia Commons. | Made background black, multiplied brightness by 1.5. |
Target | Wikimedia Commons. | Made background and interior ring black. Respect to whoever had the brilliant idea and mad skills to make the icon an SVG doughnut with a red outline of the exact correct thickness instead of making three concentric doughnuts. |
Amazon | Wikimedia Commons. | I couldn't find the app's icon, so I used their logo and put the 'a' above the arrow thing. I couldn't find an SVG of the shopping cart, but that's okay, because it's probably subliminal messaging to make you shop more at Amazon, and the 'a' might be too small, but that's okay, because the original size ratio was probably subliminal messaging to not question Jeff Bezos' participation in the Illuminati. |
Sprint | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. |
Snapchat | Wikimedia Commons. | Remember when Snapchat made their icon's outline thicker, and then everyone got upset, because it made the logo more ugly? Well, you can be less upset because I changed the outline to be more of the ghost and the background to be black. But I disapprove of Snapchat, because it seems to be for vain, generic white girls to post and message photos of themselves with cringey effects, delete messages to hide evidence and get spoon-fed misandrist garbage that barely passes as news. |
ESPN | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. (Also, some of your ESPN subscription goes towards maintaining Disney's monopoly*, and betting on sports is a bad idea. Here are some free alternatives which are more intellectual than watching people playing sports.) |
Google Chrome | Wikimedia Commons. | It wouldn't load properly in Affinity Photo (with a square appearing around it), so I used my massive intellect to subtract a circle from a rectangle to make it look like it loaded properly. Music Method, but then I also made an alternative one where I inverted the central small circle to make it dark grey. |
PayPal | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. I made the central part the sum of the two P's, then scaled it down to fit in our puny human spectrum. It's pretty realistic, though, and looks like the P's are transparent. No longer shall we have huge swaths of whiteness in our home screens when trying to access online payment, what an age we live in. |
Twitch | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method, I couldn't find the speech bubble, so I changed it to the 'T' in 'Twitch'. There's a white-filled and black-filled 'T'. |
Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. White-and-black-filled 'P's. | |
The Weather Channel | Wikimedia Commons. | Made text blue and background black. |
BBC iPlayer | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. (It was already pretty dark, but there was an ugly gradient, so it's now pure black.) It's slightly different, because I used the logo with 'BBC' and 'iPlayer' horizontally across from each other, but I made them both centre-aligned and moved 'iPlayer' down so that it's the same distance from the squares as they are from each other, then made it 75% of the total width. This seemed to work very well, but it's slightly bigger, especially 'BBC'. |
App in the Air | App Store. | Music Method. (The background wasn't quite black enough before.) Also, I deducted the background colour from the lines. |
Pages & Keynote | Some Apple.com webpage. | Reconstructed by hand. The circles may be slightly off, from upscaling and overlapping while antialiasing, but it's extremely subtle and you're not going to notice it in a tiny little icon. |
Firefox & Firefox Focus | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. Also made one with the Earth dimmed (to make it look like it's night), but that one doesn't look as good as I thought. Firefox Focus also had this crazy file format that made Affinity Photo decide to remove the shading on the fox and turn it into a completely white monster that engulfs the Earth, burning humanity's eyeballs. 2019 update as well, for regular Firefox. |
Brave, Microsoft Edge | Wikimedia Commons. | Music Method. |
BBC Sounds | Their website, but I used a Firefox extension instead of the built-in Safari Resources Viewer, which doesn't get HTML tracings. | Music Method. |
Spotify | Wikimedia Commons. | It already has a black background (as far as I can see, I haven't checked), so I made the green circle the largest that could possibly fit into the square, then made it black and made the three bars green. |
Compass and Measure | Their App Store pages. | The backgrounds were dark-grey instead of black, so I reconstructed them and then made the backgrounds black, decreasing all other colours by to keep the contrast as it was. The Measure app's spacing may not be perfect, but it's probably more accurate than a human eye can see, and for the Compass. I couldn't find out how to make a rounded triangle, so I used a regular one. It approximately fits what it should have been, but I couldn't get it to exactly fit, so I put it upright and on top of the app's square and then rotated it 45º around the square's centre. |
TypeWise (TypeWise.app) | e-Mailing the developers (I don't think I'm allowed to share it here, but it's probably okay with them, since my defacing of their icon is free publicity. | Made background pure black instead of white, and made a 'darker' version which does the same to the text. |
Telegram | Wikimedia Commons. | It's now the paper-aeroplane upscaled and against a black background. |
Khan Academy | Wikimedia Commons.svg). | Music Trick, made the flower-book-man optionally black. |
YouTube Studio | Their App Store page, then reconstructing it in Affinity Photo. | Music Trick, made the Play button optionally black. I used an Affinity Photo gear, which isn't quite the same. I got it extremely close, and centered it. The only difference you can see is that the outer and inner parts are now rounded, as opposed to straight lines. However, it's a tiny app icon, and is a small price to pay for salvation. |
GarageBand | The App Store page, then reconstructing it in Affinity Photo. | Books Trick. |
Fantastical | The App Store page, then reconstructing it in Affinity Photo. | |
Things 3 | The App Store page, then reconstructing it in Affinity Photo. | |
Music Bot | Apple Music icon. | Inverted. |
Best Brokers | Their App Store page, then reconstructing it in Affinity Photo. | Made suit completely black, halved brightness of shirt, kept tie the same. |
App Store Updates | Found the Save icon in SF Symbols, which is like the Updates one but not filled. | I put it at 3/4ths of the icon height, then gave it the same gradient as the App Store. I would make this for all App Store sections, but this is the only one we use on a regular basis, and this lets you skip the advertising on the 'Today' page. |
Yes. You pick a peer and after some setup, create a bitcoin transaction to fund the lightning channel; it’ll then take another transaction to close it and release your funds. You and your peer always hold a bitcoin transaction to get your funds whenever you want: just broadcast to the blockchain like normal. In other words, you and your peer create a shared account, and then use Lightning to securely negotiate who gets how much from that shared account, without waiting for the bitcoin blockchain.
Yes, Lightning is open source. Anyone can review the code (in the same way as the bitcoin code)
Similar to the bitcoin network, no one will ever own or control the Lightning Network. The code is open source and free for anyone to download and review. Anyone can run a node and be part of the network.
No, your bitcoin will never leave the blockchain. Instead your bitcoin will be held in a multi-signature address as long as your channel stays open. When the channel is closed; the final transaction will be added to the blockchain. “Off-chain” is not a perfect term, but it is used due to the fact that the transfer of ownership is no longer reflected on the blockchain until the channel is closed.
Not necessarily,
Example: A and B have a channel. 1 BTC each. A sends B 0.5 BTC. B sends back 0.25 BTC. Balance should be A = 0.75, B = 1.25. If A gets disconnected, B can publish the first Tx where the balance was A = 0.5 and B = 1.5. If the node B does in fact attempt to cheat by publishing an old state (such as the A=0.5 and B=1.5 state), this cheat can then be detected on-chain and used to steal the cheaters funds, i.e., A can see the closing transaction, notice it's an old one and grab all funds in the channel (A=2, B=0). The time that A has in order to react to the cheating counterparty is given by the CheckLockTimeVerify (CLTV) in the cheating transaction, which is adjustable. So if A foresees that it'll be able to check in about once every 24 hours it'll require that the CLTV is at least that large, if it's once a week then that's fine too. You definitely do not need to be online and watching the chain 24/7, just make sure to check in once in a while before the CLTV expires. Alternatively you can outsource the watch duties, in order to keep the CLTV timeouts low. This can be achieved both with trusted third parties or untrusted ones (watchtowers). In the case of a unilateral close, e.g., you just go offline and never come back, the other endpoint will have to wait for that timeout to expire to get its funds back. So peers might not accept channels with extremely high CLTV timeouts. -- Source
Tiny payments are possible: since fees are proportional to the payment amount, you can pay a fraction of a cent; accounting is even done in thousandths of a satoshi. Payments are settled instantly: the money is sent in the time it takes to cross the network to your destination and back, typically a fraction of a second.
Yes, but not in theory. You could make a poorer lightning network without it, which has higher risks when establishing channels (you might have to wait a month if things go wrong!), has limited channel lifetime, longer minimum payment expiry times on each hop, is less efficient and has less robust outsourcing. The entire spec as written today assumes segregated witness, as it solves all these problems.
No, for now. For the first version of the protocol, if you wanted to send a normal bitcoin transaction using your channel, you have to close it, send the funds, then reopen the channel (3 transactions). In future versions, you and your peer would agree to spend out of your lightning channel funds just like a normal bitcoin payment, allowing you to use your lightning wallet like a normal bitcoin wallet.
Not really. Anyone can set up a node, and so it’s a race to the bottom on fees. In practice, we may see the network use a nominal fee and not change very much, which only provides an incremental incentive to route on a node you’re going to use yourself, and not enough to run one merely for fees. Having clients use criteria other than fees (e.g. randomness, diversity) in route selection will also help this.
Lightning is already being tested on the Mainnet Twitter Link but as for a specific date, Jameson Lopp says it best
Nope, because there is no custody ever involved. It's just like forwarding packets. -- Source
Furthermore, the Lightning Network scales not with the transaction throughput of the underlying blockchain, but with modern data processing and latency limits - payments can be made nearly as quickly as packets can be sent. -- Source
Bitcoin Stack Exchange Answer
Bitcoin Stack Exchange Answer
Bitcoin Stack Exchange Answer
Bitcoin Stack Exchange Answer
Each exchange will get to decide and need to implement the software into their system, but some ideas have been outlined here: Google Doc - Lightning Exchanges
Note that by virtue of the usual benefits of cost-less, instantaneous transactions, lightning will make arbitrage between exchanges much more efficient and thus lead to consistent pricing across exchange that adopt it. -- Source
Stack Exchange Answer
According to Rusty's calculations we should be able to store 1 million nodes in about 100 MB, so that should work even for mobile phones. Beyond that we have some proposals ready to lighten the load on endpoints, but we'll cross that bridge when we get there. -- Source
No you'd remember the information from the last time you started the app and only sync the differences. This is not yet implemented, but it shouldn't be too hard to get a preliminary protocol working if that turns out to be a problem. -- Source
Lightning is based on participants in the network running lightning node software that enables them to interact with other nodes. This does not require being a full bitcoin node, but you will have to run "lnd", "eclair", or one of the other node softwares listed above.
All lightning wallets have node software integrated into them, because that is necessary to create payment channels and conduct payments on the network, but you can also intentionally run lnd or similar for public benefit - e.g. you can hold open payment channels or channels with higher volume, than you need for your own transactions. You would be compensated in modest fees by those who transact across your node with multi-hop payments. -- Source
Sure, you can help write up educational material. You can learn and read more about the tech at http://dev.lightning.community/resources. You can test the various desktop and mobile apps out there (Lightning Desktop, Zap, Eclair apps). -- Source
No -- Source
lit doesn't depend on having your own full node -- it automatically connects to full nodes on the network. -- Source
LND uses a light client mode, so it doesn't require a full node. The name of the light client it uses is called neutrino
Upon opening a channel, the two endpoints first agree on a reserve value, below which the channel balance may not drop. This is to make sure that both endpoints always have some skin in the game as rustyreddit puts it :-)
For a cheat to become worth it, the opponent has to be absolutely sure that you cannot retaliate against him during the timeout. So he has to make sure you never ever get network connectivity during that time. Having someone else also watching for channel closures and notifying you, or releasing a canned retaliation, makes this even harder for the attacker. This is because if he misjudged you being truly offline you can retaliate by grabbing all of its funds. Spotty connections, DDoS, and similar will not provide the attacker the necessary guarantees to make cheating worthwhile. Any form of uncertainty about your online status acts as a deterrent to the other endpoint. -- Source
You typically want to have more than one channel open at any given time for redundancy's sake. And we imagine open and close will probably be automated for the most part. In fact we already have a feature in LND called autopilot that can automatically open channels for a user.
Frequency will depend whether the funds are needed on-chain or more useful on LN. -- Source
Stack Exchange Answer
Stack Exchange Answer
You don't really set up a "node" in the sense that anyone with more than one channel can automatically be a node and route payments. Fees on LN can be set by the node, and can change dynamically on the network. -- Source
Yes but it has to be implemented in the Lightning software being used. -- Source
You won't have to do anything. With autopilot enabled, it'll automatically open and close channels based on the availability of the network. -- Source
Stack Exchange Answer
Closing Words. All three video download extensions for Chrome work well but had occasional issues. It happened, for instance, that Video Downloader Professional would not detect the main video that played on the page, or that the extension would download "fake" videos instead of the real one. S-Kyousuke youtube-dl-gui - Open Source, standalone, no install, download video, audio, automatic file conversion, very easy to use. The program can run multiple windows simultaneously. The program can run multiple windows simultaneously. Users can use this extension to convert their favorite videos by following the following simple steps: First, they should click on the "YouTube to MP3" icon on the top right of the video and you will be redirected to their official site where you will paste the YouTube video URL to access this YouTube to MP3 service. This extension gives you a ton of different download and saving options for both music and video formats, making it really easy to save whatever you need from YouTube for your own use. There’s a whole page of options that can be edited as well, making it easy to change settings and preferences on the fly. Vimeo Video Downloader version installation notes: After you download the crx file for Vimeo Video Downloader , open Chrome’s extensions page (chrome 28/03/2012 Computers How to download videos from YouTube, Vimeo, and more. To quickly download video from YouTube in audio formats MP3 or MP4, you need to copy the URL, insert it into the search string and click Convert. For such manipulation, registration on the site is not required. How to download youtube video Method 3: jDownloader jDownloader is one of the most popular direct download tools that you can find, and if you have it installed on your Windows computer, GNU / Linux or macOS will also be useful for downloading videos from YouTube. Download YouTube videos with different video quality: 1080P, 720P, 480P, 360p etc. Supports all formats Mp3, MP4, FLV, WebM, 3GP 4.5 / 5 ( 12110 votes ) Last Update Newer versions: if the video is splitted into multiple parts, all parts will be downloaded (17-08-2018) there is a context menu item to download all the episodes of a tv show (17-08-2018) Click Download Video. It's the pink button at the top of the page. This downloads the video to your Downloads folder. Alternatively, you can scroll down and click Download next to a video that contains a different resolution or format. The resolution for each download is listed below "Quality".
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