

can we find a way to spoof this so that they think legit physical disk usage is going up?
poop
can we find a way to spoof this so that they think legit physical disk usage is going up?
jellyfin was a fork of emby anyway, its core framework is solid.
Emby has more of the plex-like polish, but it is more closed source than I would prefer to trust with my media, so I get by with Jellyfin. It works more than well enough fro my in-home media streaming and I still run plex for my remote users as I bought a plex pass way back at the start and I’m going to use it until I simply cant anymore… which seems to be rapidly approaching.
China putting china on top of the charts is expected, but it’s per capita production that makes more sense for direct comparison of countries.
In that case… Australia is the leader by a strong margin…
If you want it Per Capita, try this one with data from 2023.
Pretty different story naturally.
(edited link to include the same countries as the op post)
Their consciousness is arguable to begin with
I never used it, but it was a popular third party add-on before the feature was integrated.
I’ve had a Lifetime PlexPass since 2013, so I’ve definitely had my moneys worth and then some, but for the last 2 years I’ve been dual wielding Jellyfin and watching it slowly get to the point where I can move over entirely.
I’m 100% Jellyfin now for my personal playback at home, and will be transitioning users over to it as soon as it gets a few more user management features for remote users.
cant wait to see how Sky spin this.
there are just as many audiobook releases done as individual chapter files as there are in chaptered m4b files. any good audiobook player should handle either just fine.
I get most of my audiobooks from soulseek at the moment, but there are a few things that are pulled from Usenet and ABB
I’ve been using it for years, it works with chaptered m4b files perfectly, but also plays separate chapter files in just about any format you throw at it seamlessly.
I run N+ in a container, gets the job done perfectly well.
95% of my media comes via Usenet for I don’t bother with a VPN there, but my torrent client and *arrs are behind a VPN.
I automated this with FileFlows.
New media automatically has Audio tracks sorted with the best track (English, most channels, highest bitrate) set to index0 and set as default and a basic stereo AAC track added for compatibility if there isn’t already one in the file. superfluous tracks are removed. Subtitles are also cleared out if there are extras too.
I also have Fileflows handle a light compression pass on files that are more than 6 months old for archival, in certain video libraries where I don’t need perfect copies stored.
Most of the files you get from private and public trackers will be same ones you can get via Usenet so it’s pretty much the same everywhere, filtering your *Arrs to prioritise certain release groups helps when you know specific shows or genres are better supplied by a certain group.
The best HACS addon by far in my opinion has been the Node-Red companion add on that makes combining HA with NR significantly easier and more powerful.
I do almost all of my automation in NR flows and HA is mainly API connector and dashboard frontend.
I have a customised dashboard running on a Sonoff NS panel Pro (using the normal methods to get back to stock android on those panels) I just use it as a button pad for a media room, so the dashboard is mostly just a few pages of buttons in a 3x3 grid for source selection, modes, AC and Lighting controls etc, mostly hitting triggers in Node-Red (via the HACS node-red addon) rather than directly in Homeassistant so that it’s easier to have the dashboard trigger perform a larger chain of tasks easier (in my opinion) than doing it purely in HA.
It’s not perfect… because there’s no easy way to lock a dashboard to a certain pixel height and width without a lot of tinkering with third party plug-ins and SSL.
I’ve got it working pretty well, the one gripe I have is tap and hold functions are impossible as the touchscreen seems too sensitive and there is no dead-zone control for tap and hold.
But recently i’ve programmed a new smart remote for the media room that does most of it on the remote directly, so I only use it for configuring the A/C occasionally now, when my remotes simpler on/off integration isn’t enough.
you can pirate on a kindle it’s just more annoying to do
Kobo is the go-to for bang for buck readers that don’t care where your files are from and have good format support. got my dad a libra 2 and it’s great, especially with the physical page turn buttons. the default reader opens most files just fine, but you can also put KoReader on them for more functionality without too much hassle.
Personally I use an older Boox Note 3 which is easier since it runs android, but is massive overkill to be used as just a reader, i use it as my main tablet and a notepad/sketchpad.
Jellyfin has come a hell of a long way since it first forked from Emby. sure its not as feature complete and polished as plex but it’s far from shit, and it’s free and open.
I run both side by side with several clients on each and have been a plexpass holder since 2013.
time for a re-watch. it gets better with time.
and by better I mean the existential dread is worse.
Sure, but something tells me the kinds of people who use software like Wondershare and Aiseesoft video converters arent going to be writing their own FFMPEG automations in batch files or bash scripts.
it’s less than $3 on GOG at the moment.
And it is easily available through other means.
I still fire up HOMM3 + HD + HOTA every now and then.