Fair enough. Personally I put all my media on my Jellyfin server, so kind of a similar situation here.
Fair enough. Personally I put all my media on my Jellyfin server, so kind of a similar situation here.
Gundam 0083 has even better tunes. The music and animation of that one slap so hard you almost don’t notice the garbage plot lmao
Yeah, mpv is better on Linux. VLC is still my preference for DVDs on the computer though. Super easy.
While I appreciate the reference, most kids probably don’t know about the whole Metallica Napster thing.
It’s not true currently. Firefox and Chrome trade blows on which is more performance and which uses more/less RAM these days. It varies, but they’re quite close.
FYI late 80s is a Millenial. Xennial is like 79-80. Millenials go from 81-96
Adventurous young person, ready to be sent on a quest, is where you got filed in my head.
Sincerely,
~Lazy millenial wizard who wants help running errands.
We did have some DOS games on CD during the Windows 95/98 era, though. Lemmings always ran better if you dropped down to DOS and ran it from there instead of trying to run it through Windows, for instance.
Generally the app is better. Compatible with more container formats, audio formats (surround sound, Dolby digital, etc), and has hardware supported decoding for h265 video in addition to h264.
At least in the case of a Jellyfin server, you can download media locally when you know you’ll be without internet
I use Bazarr to find subtitles. You can set it to only find Forced or to find the regular track for your language of choice and Forced, and it’s trivial to set it to include the file itself in the search for subtitles so it’ll only download subtitles for videos that are missing the subtitles.
It’s also great because it can automatically sync the downloaded subtitles to the actual video’s audio, or the existing subtitle track if one exists (like if you just have the full subtitle track and want to sync the Forced track)
Also 6x7 + 2x5
It’s a Circuit City.
I bought my first PC’s parts all from TigerDirect’s website. Did a bunch of my research for it using their catalogue.
Nowadays I’m just happy to live an hour from a Microcenter.
If you switch the devices line to
- /dev/dri:/dev/dri
as other have suggested, that should expose the Intel iGPU to your Jellyfin docker container. Presently you’re only exposing the Nvidia GPU.
QSV is the highest quality video transcoding hardware acceleration out there. It’s worth using if you have a modern Intel CPU (8th gen or newer)
What happens when a genius gets bored
He doesn’t have the original Pro Tools 0.8 sessions with the raw takes, plugin settings, etc.
That’s the level of potential preservation we’re missing out on here. Not just the final product, not just the stems, but the full original raw takes and the mixes that made those takes into the original final products.
Jellyfin doesn’t need any particular setup to work directly from LAN because it doesn’t ever try to use a central login provider the way Plex does.
The only reason OP is struggling with it is because they set it up so that they can only connect to it via Tailscale.
Yeah, it’s an all-time classic no doubt