

I use sync thing with untrusted keys. That way the data ends up in multiple locations but it’s not accessible remotely. If you don’t care about the data and the locations you don’t have to do that but it’s a nice feature.
WYGIWYG
I use sync thing with untrusted keys. That way the data ends up in multiple locations but it’s not accessible remotely. If you don’t care about the data and the locations you don’t have to do that but it’s a nice feature.
There are adapters to bring then back to regular SATA connectors. Then you could throw HBAs at them. You’re going to have a hell of a time managing the heat though. They’re lower power, but they’re not exactly cool running.
Hard disagree, I’d bifurcate my internal DNS in a hot second before I tried to fix this with static routes. Was internal services aren’t going anywhere in that DNS servers ain’t going anywhere The only time they can figure it should take effect is when it’s needed
Asking a noob to handle static routes is a double ungood situation.
Home gamer with a router that can handle reflection would be rare.
It’s one service that he’s hosting and in control of, and he’s also in control of that internal IP so it doesn’t have to change.
If anything I’d be worried that those VMs and applications in the VMs are getting regular updates. He’s more likely to get intruded through a zero day on one of those hacks than he is to see any serious issues through throwing a couple DNS records around.
They should be careful, they’re just selling small form factor computers with removable drive bays. Standing up and unraid or a true Naz isn’t all that difficult. And then there’s plenty of competition out there ready and willing to eat their lunch.
Ansible’s not all that bad. The alternatives are far more complicated.
Jeff geerling has a bunch of videos on ansible 101.
Ansible if you want to do it the right way.
Or keep all of your configs in one tree and use syncthing on it If you want to phone it in. Turn on versioning call it a night.
I ran tdarr for a while, eventually I found for most things that it was faster (and better quality) to re-download in better formats than to re-encode.
You get some coverage for free but if you’re really getting slammed I wish to stay up they’re not going to do everything for free. I believe They click here to prove you’re not a butt is gratis.
The DMZ is the right idea. But it’s the old way. You definitely want whatever is serving your website to be separated out from your house. You’re hosting should be on an isolated VLAN. The internet should only be able to talk to the server it needs to talk to, no other ports. That box should only be allowed to talk to what it absolutely must talk to and only on the ports that are required. You should run an independent firewall on each one of the boxes that are involved in the hosting with only the proper ports open.
Giving up your private IP Will definitely give away your general location to everyone and your precise location to the authorities.
I would highly recommend using cloudflare or one of the other funnel options. A lot of people don’t like cloud flare because they can capitalize on your traffic, The cloudflare also just won’t shut you down and sell you out like your ISP will at the first request, They don’t do shit about anything until there’s a warrant or a court filing. On the upside you don’t give out your private IP to anyone. You have DDOS protection, and a reasonable layer of anominity.
You need to check daily to make sure all of your software is updated. We’re talking OS, middleware, plugins, application. Preferably via automation. All of the software and plugins you use for this type of hosting end up getting vulnerabilities.
Security is especially difficult on forums. There’s lots of opportunities there for skilled people who are pissed off at what you or someone else is saying to get butthurt. People know exactly what you’re running, then they do some magic behind the scenes next thing you know there’s a bunch of admins you didn’t create.
You don’t need to be hosting your own email but you are going to need an SMTP provider, most free services won’t let you masquerade the from address.
Unfortunately for a crossfading they need to wait for jellyfin to provide it on their side.
I wouldn’t be surprised to find a normalization plugin though.
Remote access is definitely a pain, and just surfacing the ports is a bad idea.
Finamp is close. No visualization, No normalization, and there’s gapless playback but no crossfading.
I use tailscale to watch videos and play music remotely.
Finamp lets you listen to music and add songs to a playlist.
I’m missing the crossfade tracks option massively.
I’m missing the AI DJ’s, but i could let them go in the name of privacy.
I kinda miss the visualization.
I really miss Plex’s free SSL, server locator and user management.
They don’t even have the excuse
just for ref, I’m not downvoting you. They do offer some things that cost them dev/money/time. And some of those things are pain points on Jellyfin.
They give you SSL and dynamic DNS style stuff behind the scenes. They give you a remote service that tells you if you’re remotely visible. They cache the tvdb and manage some subscriptions for EPG and do a pretty good job partnering with (and presumably caching) open subtitles.
None of that makes up for their rug-pulling bullshit.
You used to be able to download shit to your phone then become a local server so other people on your local network could watch off your device.
You used to be able to run 3rd party plugins improving libraries and storing off youtube meta
They’re scrapping watch together
They’re scrapping free remote
They’re spiraling the drain… But I won’t miss them, I’ll miss what they once were.
What do you mean by this?
Not OP
Hardware-accelerated streaming is a premium feature and requires an active Plex Pass subscription.
If you want to use your video card to transcode, you have to be paid.
Well that’s the beginning of the end for them.
I’m about half-way off the platform already (and I’m a lifetime subscriber)
The only thing I go back for is Roku use (better app), PlexAmp (better app) and offline viewing. I don’t have to go off JF for those, but it’s a lot better on Plex.
But it’s not so much better than I can’t protest.
does jellyfin have a roku app?
Yes, it streams pretty well, it has some UX issues, but it will let you get off plex as it stands right now with most of your needs covered.
I JUST managed to get my closest ring outside my family to join Signal.
We have a total of 7 people now.
I’d light up a server and host matrix/frendica/lemmy/mastodon/headscale in an instant if I thought I could get those 7 to join.
You know I get the cloud saves, and maybe the discord, If they’re buying their own boosts it’s not free.
But without the pay features, it’s just a content management system for storing exes and a little metadata. I have the same thing in every torrent indexer I use.
Building a pay service for people that are pirating software is a losing proposition.
No Linux/Mac client
Source available not open source
$5-8 a month to support cloud saves for your self-hosted product. The only even remotely interesting features are behind the paywall.
Might as well just throw the binaries up on a tiddlywiki and call it a day
They’re looking for traffic patterns. It doesn’t matter what encryption you’re using, If it’s point to point, they’re going to find it and disable it.