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It’s like Kodi-lite, specifically for shows? It’s not for me, but cool that it’s out there
It’s like Kodi-lite, specifically for shows? It’s not for me, but cool that it’s out there
As of June 2022, more than 500 hours of video were uploaded to YouTube every minute. If that video is stored at 6Mb/s, a conservative estimate, that equates to about 10TB a minute. Obviously you wouldn’t want everything, but it’s still way more than the peertube network could handle in it’s current form I’m sure. I cannot fathom the amount of data that Big Datatm handles, the fact that most of the services are free makes me highly suspicious.
The Linux way, as it was written.
I’d only recommend Duolingo to dip a toe in. If after awhile you’re wanting a bit more, I’ve had a good experience with Deutsch Welle’s german course - https://learngerman.dw.com/en/learn-german/s-9528
Also Babel is excellent but pricey.
The irony of monopoly becoming a megolithic franchise
I struggle to believe that the content is worthwhile with a thumbnail like that… but you’ve piqued my intrest, well done
I would definitely recommend consumer grade hardware for a small home server, I ran older server gear (dual e5645+42GB ram) and found it to be loud and power hungry, especially at idle. Moved over to only slightly newer consumer stuff (i5-3470+8GB ram) and it still did what I needed it to, without costing $40AUD a month to run.
8GB of RAM is perhaps a bit limiting at times but I’ve not yet run into any critical issues because of it. I wouldn’t want to try simultaneous, high bit-rate transcodes on it but aside from that it’s been fine for my use case.
I believe you need emby premium to use the live TV feature, but I’m not 100% on that
Everyone’s naming Plex, but just to be different I’ll throw Emby out there. I haven’t had any issues with it, and there’s a few features it has that I like.
Good luck and God speed Sir
But just to note, this doesn’t work if your ISP places you in a double NAT situation by using carrier grade NAT
Unpopular opinion, but we don’t know that…
Or sometimes also x86_64
Why do you run multiple *arr containers? What can two or three do that one couldn’t?
I’m running a mini-ITX system with three 3.5" drives, the case dimensions for it are 240x207x401mm. It’s a pretty tight package, and way smaller and more efficient than the dual Xeon Dell T7500 I used to run.
But it still requires a static IP to access it reliably, right?
This is one of the strangest scams I’ve seen, what is the world coming to when there’s a buyer for this? Dystopian cyberpunk realness, that’s what
They’re fuckin’ nihilists dude, they don’t believe in anything