![](/static/253f0d9b/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://fry.gs/pictrs/image/c6832070-8625-4688-b9e5-5d519541e092.png)
thanks for the explanation. I’ll stick with jellyfin for now, I’ve heard rough things about privacy with Plex and that explains why.
thanks for the explanation. I’ll stick with jellyfin for now, I’ve heard rough things about privacy with Plex and that explains why.
personally, I wouldn’t want my files going through plexs servers, especially with how shit I’ve heard they are with their privacy policy. that’s a really interesting concept tho, and makes a lot of sense. I doubt jellyfin will ever do that simply because they don’t have the resources to host that as you said.
thanks for the explanation tho! greatly appreciated
I haven’t used Plex in a while, but I’m confused how Plex handles WAN connections without using any port forwarding? how is that possible?
really? I never had an issue with just sticking it behind a reverse proxy, doing some port forwarding, and setting an apex domain record, that was it. curious what wasn’t working for you?
first game I played in HDR was mass effect legendary. I don’t care that the game itself is close to 15 years old, the 4k remaster + HDR blew my mind and set a new standard for how good games could look.
yeah and the said part is most people without the tech background would never notice the index.php in the URL, or care.
every single time I have issues with my self hosted servers. it’s always the DNS lol
I could never own a dell. as far as I’m concerned, they make crazy overpriced laptops that are pretty much guaranteed to need 200$ of maintenance down the road when the hinges inevitably fail.
agreed
yes very much agreed on this. docker is awesome but imo the reliance on it will absolutely cause issues down the line
tf you talking about? the engineer engineers the solution and the developer develops it
programming! I had heard that programming is better on Linux so I gave it a go and quickly realized it was better for everything else as well
damn I didn’t realize they were arm devices, I assumed all surfaces were x86. thanks for the info!
both of y’all should try here: https://github.com/linux-surface/linux-surface/wiki/Installation-and-Setup
posting from sync! let’s goooo!!!
you can swap ram while a device is on if you do it early enough in the boot process. on some you can do it even while just in bios! probably not worth it to find out if it works on your device though, this was in 2017 or so on like 2013 devices.