Understandable! I’ll keep an eye on the project for the future!
I might try running it in bottles and see what the experience is like.
Understandable! I’ll keep an eye on the project for the future!
I might try running it in bottles and see what the experience is like.
Any progress on the plans for a native Linux client or Web Interface? Last I checked there was only a Windows client available (although it could be ran within proton to be fair).
While Windows is no doubt the popular gaming OS ATM, I think you’ll find a much higher population of Linux users amongst the self-hosted crowd.
Your service is exactly what I want for my GOG library, so I’d love to give it a spin!
Look into mumble. It’s NOT a discord replacement but does provide a good quality, low latency, OSS voice chat. Mumble + Signal group chat is what my friends and I use for gaming. Seems to work well.
Tip: Turn on text-to-speech to get narrated announcements when users join channels. Also works for text chat shenanigans. 🤣
yeah, I haven’t done much with music that’s not in English. You can also look up the album in the musicbrainz database as well to see how it’s listed there before you stick Picard on it.
Also another helpful resource when I was learning how to arrange my libraries…
https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/media/music
Also note that the music library in Jellyfin has a preferred language option that might apply here.
Use Picard to correct missing metadata, album art, and file name / structure.
https://picard.musicbrainz.org/
I’ve had zero issues scrapping my music library since doing this.
Just make sure to review the settings in Picard to set up file naming conventions how you want it before you start.
BTW you CAN do DNS in a unifi gateway. It just requires making dnsmasq entries through shell. Perfect solution? No. But it gets you there with no additional hardware.
I mean speaking from experience, its resurrected a couple problematic CPUs for me. CPU pins no, pads on an LGA style CPU, sure.
I’m with catloaf. Consistent CPU soft locks point to a possible bad memory module or CPU.
Clear CMOS.
Try removing one memory module at a time.
See if there is an option to disable hyperthreading in bios.
Another thing to try is to remove the CPU, careful not to damage the LGA pins on the motherboard, and clean the CPU contacts with alcohol. Take care to ground yourself out and the case before handling the CPU out of socket.
See my other comment on this thread. Basically I have a shared mount point for the two containers and TubeSync writes video metadata to NFO files.
TubeSync has an option to write metadata to NFO files. Then you just tell Jellyfin to not run any scrapper and just use said NFO files. It’s not perfect but it gets you a title and description for the video.
I use TubeSync to do the downloading and then have Jellyfin as a frontend player. Seems to work pretty good for me and was pretty quick to stand up in docker.
I’ve been using fedora on a small intel 6th gen or newer mini pc. I then cook up some custom launch scripts that cause JMP to run at login. I use cockpit and a CMK agent for remote monitoring and management.
I got sick of the lack certificate management on Android TV and how much you need to do to make it reasonably private.
If you are on the latest mesa drivers (hence fedora over a more LTS release), and you install Jellfin Media Player via flatpak, everything should just work with hardware decoding.
You can self-host the kiwix server in docker and grab .zim files for whatever wiki you want to host. Wikipedia is one of those files.
I can also vouch that Android Auto works in a work profile.
I would cd into the user folder that you want to add / remove files from and see what the ownership is to begin with and simply replicate ownership to match what’s already there.
Generally, in my experience, modifying the backing storage for a nextcloud instance is more of a PITA than its worth. I would just mount the webDAV in your file manager. This way the nextcloud db stays in sync with the backing storage.
If you are going to be making direct modifications to the backing storage, check this form post on modifying the nextcloud config to have it look for changes on the filesystem.
As for the permission side of things, run ls -lh in the folder that you want to make changes and see what the user:group is for ownership of the existing files and make sure your new files match. Chmod and chown will be your friends here and chmod has a --reference option that let’s you mirror permissions from an existing file, a real time saver.
Hopefully this helps!
I’m not entirely sure tbh. Like I said, mixed results depending on the app, but my working throey is that the session installer can automatically install apps that have the same signature and don’t require any changes in permissions. I’ve seen some apps do in-place upgrades with no user touch but some don’t.
I’ve had better success with auto-update using Driod-ify. At the very least the client downloads the updates automatically so it’s just a matter of tapping install.
For container management I use portainer CE and for the rest I use CheckMK.
I having one of those things… Ya’ know a picture with words…
Heroic Games Launcher could be the answer. The GameVault devs wouldn’t need to reinvent the wheel with a Linux client dealing with all the proton sand boxing. Just add to the heroic launcher.
Looks like someone has already had a similar thought too…
https://github.com/Heroic-Games-Launcher/HeroicGamesLauncher/issues/2951