I will check that out, thank you!
- 0 Posts
- 27 Comments
Anything that you’re aware of that will also strip out the 28 minutes of commercials in a 36 minute podcast?
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Just created my own zero trust network!English4·2 months agoFuck yeah! One issue down, 9,374 to go!
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Just created my own zero trust network!English1·2 months agoI would think the Jellyfin logs would say if it deleted something. But I have to say, I cannot fully understand GUID and PUID in all cases. But you can try to subtract 1 digit from PUID (100 to 99) and then try to delete a show or movie within Jellyfin’s interface. If it won’t do it, then you’ve got the permissions at least where it can’t delete things. It is possible to not view things as well, so it might take some research or trial and error and make sure you write down where it is now. But, it will remove one factor at least.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Just created my own zero trust network!English3·2 months agoDo you have the media cleanup plugin installed for Jellyfin? I wonder if you change the PUID and/or GUID if you couldn’t make sure Jellyfin wasn’t the source of the deletion.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Anyone have the experience registering a domain name with false personal information?English3·3 months agoI mean, it renews every year. The worst case scenario is it’s against the TOS of the registrar and they can suspend your domain. Do with that what you will of course. Also, I was doing that with another domain but fixed it when I moved it to porkbun with their free anonymity service. I wasn’t going to pay domain.com’s ridiculous fees for it.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Anyone have the experience registering a domain name with false personal information?English101·3 months agoI’ve had 123 Sex Drive as the address on one of my domains for over a decade now. If it’s personal use stuff, not business, you’re fine to put in whatever.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Linkwarden (v2.11.0) - open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, organize, and preserve webpages, articles, and documents (tons of new features!) 🚀English7·3 months agoSome nice improvements to an already great piece of kit. Good job y’all. Looking forward to updating.
Well, with Plex constantly changing allowed abilities and such, it seems to me that this is the expected outcome.
The OP might disagree from what I’m seeing.
But I keep hearing the value of Plex is that anyone can use it.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I have some questions about selfhostingEnglish2·4 months agoIt really depends on your use case. I’ve gone through 9tb of data in a month. And often have up to a dozen BR quality movie requests at once. 35-65gb each, on average. If you’re only doing one movie at a time and only doing torrent quality, you shouldn’t have any issues.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I have some questions about selfhostingEnglish5·4 months agoOne of the issues with multiple devices is networking. Transferring totally legit files for the Arr stack to and from the NAS can be a lot of data. Keeping it all in one system means your speeds up to that point are SATA speeds vs ethernet.
For the OP, one file with hard linking is my goal, but I only use Usenet. I rip anything that comes down with Tdarr to strip languages, normalize audio and rip to H265. If you do that with torrents, you will need to keep the original for seeding.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex now want to SELL your personal dataEnglish73·4 months agoHave you set up jellyfish at your home, given access to a friend outside of your network who could not setup Jellyfin themselves, and successfully got them playing on their TV, table tablet, and/or phone? Have you been able to set them up without them having to call you every week?
Yes. It’s very easy. It might not have used to be easy but it is for the last couple of years. Dead simple. About a dozen people use my Jellyfin server across TV’s, phones, tablets, laptops. None of them are what I would call techies. It’s as simple for them as Netflix.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•getting 522 error Cloudflaired + Jellyfin + fail2banEnglish1·4 months agoYou will want the actual IP address. Localhost can get lost in various circumstances. If Cloudflare tunnel service and Jellyfin are on the same virtual network it should be fine. But I wouldn’t trust it.
But yes, your Cloudflare tunnel should only connect to http:// not https. It will serve https on the public side of things.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Seeking advice for selfhosting critical dataEnglish2·4 months agoI think you can get Open Street Maps in the F Droid app store. But, as much as I appreciate OSM, it’s just not the same as Google maps. The speed, accuracy and information doesn’t seem to have an equal.
You definitely can run Nextcloud in a VM. With decent hardware, it will do it. I guess I would say it depends on needs and expectations. My install is not snappy to me. I’ve got what I feel is a very beefy server but still. Just feels a little slow at times. Totally functional. Just has a small amount of lag when doing anything. I’ve read people say they have none at all. But when you’re busy and relying on it, my suggestion is to eke out everything you can for it for a better experience. Not make or break by any means.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Seeking advice for selfhosting critical dataEnglish2·4 months agoI don’t think it’s a problem per se, as much as it’s a difference in priorities. But the docker implementation in TrueNAS is more of an afterthought. I think they’ve fixed some issues but checking out their forums, many of the issues I faced seem to still exist. Docker packages corrupting and not being accessible in any way, not updating, just seemingly, not robust. Also, I disliked the file permission structure but that’s more preference I think. I would say TrueNAS is a great NAS just not the best hypervisor and NAS.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Seeking advice for selfhosting critical dataEnglish6·4 months agoA few things. I also think nextcloud is the way to go for what you want. I’ve gotten rid of anything Google I can. Except for maps. Man, there just is no substitute especially when mobile.
I always do, but I’m going to suggest Unraid for a NAS. Pay the money and then just enjoy it. I fought with truenas for over a year before I succumbed. You can totally play around with zfs, striped arrays whatever. I do not recommend an external enclosure. I think you’ll come to hate it for lack of ability. I recommend biting the bullet and building a machine or putting your current PC components into a real case with upgradability if possible.
Also, I wouldn’t plan on running Nextcloud in a VM. Nextcloud is pretty beefy and a VM adds complexity that I suggest against. A docker AIO version of nextcloud running on as close to bare metal as you can is probably the best option for performance.
gdog05@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•That's all folks, Plex is starting to charge for sharingEnglish1·5 months agoThat’s for the CDN. It’s about serving static, cached content faster. I actually tried to pay and use their Stream service, but it’s only to be used for serving video in a web page. While they’ve not directly clarified on the topic (even after being asked directly in the forums several times), don’t turn on caching and it appears to serve the language they’ve used in the updated TOS. I’m not a lawyer here, but parse that all as you will. Don’t take up storage on their CDN and they seem to be happy. I actually did buy some domain names through them to make sure I’m not just using their services without giving anything back. But, that’s a matter of conscience.
Using the Ecobee thermostat, I use the built in weather module in Home Assistant to give local weather data to the system. In summer, I set it up to watch for the lowest overnight temps via forecast, and trigger on the lowest temperatures we’d see. Then I’d drop the house temp to 66 or 64 degrees when the AC had to do the least amount of work. Then I’d use the basement air to keep the upstairs cool enough and use the AC as little as possible.
My last house was old and had some drafts I couldn’t find. So in the winter, if the weather turned to windy I’d increase the temp a degree or two for comfort.