

If it’s on the Internet, yes.
Given the state of the Internet, you should keep a healthy level of paranoia. I always recommend exposing as little as possible, and that means using only a VPN and not putting jellyfin itself on the Internet.
If it’s on the Internet, yes.
Given the state of the Internet, you should keep a healthy level of paranoia. I always recommend exposing as little as possible, and that means using only a VPN and not putting jellyfin itself on the Internet.
Technically only the kernel is Linux, but the userspace is all Google!
Okay technically technically it’s a modified kernel, and I’m sure there are plenty of parts of userspace that Google just imported without modification.
Software is complicated.
Technically all Android is Google software but yeah
Technically yes, but as long as your WAN gateway doesn’t provide a route, clients will only know how to reach your own gateway.
Agreed. Separate device. If your VM or hypervisor dies, or you misconfigure something, you take your Internet down. Not a fun thing to recover from.
You only need one port. WAN to switch, switch to router. The router routes and sends it back to the switch, and the switch to the LAN. Vice versa for outbound traffic. It’s called a router on a stick.
Not recommended if you’re paranoid about security, because a malicious client or particularly malformed inbound traffic could bypass your router. For general use it’s perfectly fine.
What didn’t you like? I’ve had multiple Pixels and no major issues.
Border agents are unlikely to have access to cloud data. Police definitely do, but I just don’t have a cloud backup of my phone ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I use Grapheneos’ seedvault backups to USB. It’s not a very smooth process, so they’re planning on replacing it. I’ve tested backups and restores, though, and they definitely work.
Pretty much any router will handle that.
If you want do open source, you can do something like opnwrt on hardware they support. Or, build the whole thing yourself with opnsense on any device that can run FreeBSD.
Any drive should read faster than media playback. I’d check the actual read speed and playback logs to make sure you’re not having other issues.
Nothing. The field isn’t strong enough to affect the drive. They have much stronger magnets inside them all the time.
You could just use any other object too.
If you’re using stuff like torrent clients, you can bind just those containers to gluetun. I recommend doing that instead of all of them. And then yeah the VPN server on the host.
It should work, but you may need to fiddle with routing.
What’s in the logs?