It seems this game has local coop? I was wondering if it was a nice experience for me and my GF
It seems this game has local coop? I was wondering if it was a nice experience for me and my GF
Makes sense. Though if one wants security maybe it’s better to use something like PhotoSync to copy the photos through FTP/anything and mount the volume RO.
Can’t you just mount a RO volume to an Immich container?
I agree with the others. It’s 10€ a year, plays everything on every Apple device I get, and it gets shared to my family. I use it way more than the officiel JF players.
Thank you :)
I’ve always found them pretty similar. How’d you chose one or another?
That’s why I added the “kinda”. There are a lot of small AMD boxes that can do a lot with those Ryzen.
These days you can find some kinda NUCS which are way more powerful and customisable for not a lot more than a fully fledged RPI4 with SD card and PSU
You’re not alone. I’ve been rocking Arch for a few years now, and I only reinstalled it when I changed computers. It just works.
A nice and sweet 404 lol
Firstly connections to those API should be encrypted, so parameters such as the filename shouldn’t be visible by a MitM. Also, as someone else pointed, you could rename the file beforehand to something neutral.
His problem isn’t the part where he downloads parts. Jellyfin queries 3rd party metadata providers, such as TMDB. What he’s concerned with is JF sending the filename to TMDB and getting spied on by the ISP.
Oops, I’ll let it haha
Still better than Tencant
Exactly the same. I’d like to add that my devices still get a .lan TLD from the router.
I have multiple files but a single stack. I use an alias to call compose like this:
docker compose -f file1.yaml -f file2.yaml
Etc.
Personally I automatically label and filter out of my inbox automatic emails, stuff that come often. So my inbox usually only has mails that concern me. And then I handle them the same way as you do: keep them unread till I handle them. Then archive those that are “ended”.
I don’t understand you. What’s more official than the top mod from Reddit creating a community which happens to be the one I linked?
Tbh those stuff aren’t really intuitive. But, as was my case for instance, that’s something that can be “easily” learnt as a hobbyist like us. And when you understand those concepts, at least from an abstract point, my stance is that you can become a better dev/ops/sys :) I strongly advice anyone in the field to at least play a little with Docker/containers to grasp what it is.
Thanks a lot for the summary! 🤗