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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)X
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  • How reliable are the infos from iknowwhatyoudownloaded.com?

    100% accurate. Either you, or someone who has/has had your IP (CGNAT) has downloaded those torrents in one way or another.

  • That sucks, I immediately wanted it. :(

  • generally is less hands-on for transcoding.

    Yeah, I'm not gonna give you that one. It's a single option that you toggle. Wanna use your nvidia GPU? Enable NVENC. AMD gpu/cpu? AMF. Intel CPU? QSV.

    Really not that hard...

  • Because why run one server for all your needs when you can double up, right? /s

  • but always struggled with getting it to show which device was making the call

    This depends on how you have your devices setup to use your DNS. For e.g, in my home I have my Phone and PC setup to use the IP of my AdGuard server. In AdGuard, I have them as named devices. All other devices on my network use the router as DNS, so all other requests that are not coming from my PC or Phone indicate "router" as the name.

    What’s your use case look like?

    Home based server running AdGuard forwarded through a caddy reverse_proxy to a domain. Using DoH/3 so even when remote I use my own DNS. Works great.

  • I try to explain this to the plex cultists and they usually have one of two responses;

    1. "Why would I be without internet?"
    2. "How is that helpful?"

    Takes every ounce of willpower I have to not eye roll.

  • I would say there's no value in assigning such a tight definition on self-hosting--in saying that you must use your own hardware and have it on premise.

    I would define selfhost as setting up software/hardware to work for you, when turn-key solutions exist because of one reason or another.

    Netflix exists. But we selfhost Jellyfin. Doesn't matter if its not on our hardware or not. What matters is that we're not using Netflix.

  • Escaping vendor lock-in. It's why people hate the cloud when it used to be the answer for everything. You make a good product that can only be used with your hardware/software, whatever, and people run from that shit because it's abused more often than not.

    Apple is the biggest example of this. Synology is getting worse and worse. Plex not far behind either.

  • The best part about it, is that the old-as-fuck Democrats hate it, which makes me love it all the more.

  • You got a nice guttural laugh outta me for that one.

  • I mean, it's technical documentation. There's a limit to how exciting it can be. lol.

  • Correct. Mine is 'jelly.domain.com' which bidirectionally forwards traffic between my domain and my home server.

  • If documentation is written in a readable and confluent way, RTFM isn't such a big deal. The issue comes with overly draconian and non-confluent documentation.

  • I always advocate for HTTPS. I run a caddy proxy and sidestep cloudflare all-together.

  • https://jellyfin:8096/

    Port 8096 is the default HTTP protocol port, and you're trying to access it via HTTPS. Do you have certificates installed and available for your jellyfin instance? If not, it's very likely Cloudflare won't route it correctly.

    I'm not saying this is your specific issue, but it'll be the one after you fix this one at least. You may need to mess with the cloudflare "current encryption mode" to get this to work.

  • What is a good approach to deploy docker images on a Raspberry Pi and run them?

    See if they have a git repository and just clone then build the image yourself.

  • Ahh yes, as evidenced by absolutely nothing whatsoever, I mean Jesus Christ, the GNU ideologue is completely antithetical in every possible way to your statement...

    GNU's goal is to give computer users freedom and control in their use of their computers and computing devices by collaboratively developing and publishing software that gives everyone the rights to freely run the software, copy and distribute it, study it, and modify it.

    You have less than zero idea what you're speaking about....

  • Likely. What I said has more to do with "we're next." If this is successful in France, other countries will follow suit or at the very least get pressure from the IP lobby to follow.

  • The population of just Europe, Canada and the USA is a combined is over 1 billion.

    Congratulations? This has absolutely nothing at all to do with what I've said. Not even tangentially. I'm expressly and singularly speaking of France here. EU, Canada and the US combined populations change nothing about what I've said at all...

    You look to be fighting a wet paper bag here... Sad to see honestly.