

Spin down when not in use is normally default behaviour for most systems already, you don’t need to do anything.


Spin down when not in use is normally default behaviour for most systems already, you don’t need to do anything.


Its possible to have seerr search integrated into the main jellyfin search.

Streaming torrents popcorn or stremio style is not very practical and never has been. Popcorntime still has working forks and stremio works with jellyfin to some degree but unless you also use a paid debrid service or maybe if you dont care about tanking your ratio on a private tracker There are jusy way better solutions: like using either an on demand iptv service inside jfin that costs about the same as debrid anyway but also gets you live tv.
Not to say there isnt tons of room for improvement still, but a lot of progress is being made. I suggest to folx if jellyfin doesnt meet your standards yet, try back in a year and see how much progress gets made.
I run an 8 disk 90tb BTRFS RAID0 and its been going strong for over a year. I hesitate to actually encourage anyone to live this dangerously but its mainly a media server and if i needed to i could restore any lost data from usenet or torrents using my arr stack which is on a different drive. If you can handle the risk its a nice speed boost.


Wow i literally just setup huntarr last night. Guess ill make sure its only accessible on wireguard.


I think decypharr might do what you want, it simulats a qbittorrent client to connect to debrid.


No debrid support, this is for connecting to the Arrs services which work for either torrents or usenet.


sonarr and radarr only have support for a single account wich among other things exposes api keys.
Seerr lets you have users with the same login as they use for jellyfin (or plex?) To request content and the server admin can approve or deny rhe request.


20mbps is enough for most things. It mostly limits how many peoppe you could share content to at once, but even then if you had say 4 people you wanted to stream a movie to jellyfin has options so you can limit each stream to 2mbps or whatever ends up working best.


Typically the project will offer its own deb repos and packages along with setup instructions such as steam or docker
In theory you can add LMDE or other debian based distros repos to your sources but it will most likely lead to things breaking. If you cant find instructions specific to debian then you are better off either compiling from source or using snap, appimage or whatever pre-compiled option is offered officially.
I miss when people made web browsers without appeasing advertisers. Remember when mozilla introduced the popup blocker and netscape actually incorporated that into their mainstream product? You never see stuff like that anymore because advertisers control everything on the internet now.