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3 yr. ago

  • Not without additional configuration. You’ll need to forward jellyfins port in your router and get a dynamic DNS address. That’s not hard to setup though and there are good free dyndns providers like duckdns.

  • F

  • Ich war fürs ZDF mit auf der Wahlparty der Grünen. Als die ersten Hochrechnungen bekannt gegeben haben würde bei den Zahlen der Linken fast so laut gejubelt wie bei den eigenen Zahlen. Das durchschnittliche Grünen Parteimitglied scheint also durchaus solidarisch gegenüber den Linken und ist nicht wütend über „gestohlene Stimmen“.

  • Not having to pay for hardware transcoding/tonemapping is the biggest „selling“point for Jellyfin. I used to have plex before. It worked well but I didn’t want to pay 100€ for transcoding. Never tried emby for the very same reason.

  • I don’t like him. He’s angry at everything and his videos are a chore to watch. I also feel like he’s sometimes a bit out of touch (I don’t like ads or paying for digital content either, but if no one pays for it, it‘ll stop existing) and a bit pessimistic (yes, companies aren’t your friends, but not everything you perceive as negative is done out of malice, sometimes people are just not thinking stuff through).

    However, I do appreciate him as a right to repair activist.

  • Nah, I thought that quote from the film summarized it quite well…

  • Yep. The reason Windows and macOS are way more accepted than Linux is because they’re essentially idiot proof. Linux is not and that’s not necessarily a good thing if you want the year of the Linux desktop to actually happen one day.

  • How would the reading experience improve for regular ebooks?

  • Ok, so arch doesn’t break because it’s unstable, it just breaks anyways. And it doesn’t break more in general, it just breaks worse more often. Got it.

    I’ll still stay away from the bleeding edge.

  • It’s sad that those people make discourse over actual criticism so hard.

    Rey is a wonderful example here. Your acquaintance dislikes Rey because she’s a woman. I (and a bunch of other people) dislike Rey because she’s terribly written. If you exchanged her for a man he would still be terribly written. But of course, that legitimate criticism is often lumped in with people crying „woke“ at the sight of a female protagonist.

  • Ok, the latter might actually be worth it. I’ll have to look into that.

  • That’s still exactly what I meant? Sure, arch may never break even though it’s unstable but it being unstable heightens the risk of it (or some program) breaking due to changing library versions breaking dependencies.

    Dependency issues happen much more rarely on stable systems. That’s why it’s called stable. And I very much prefer a system that isn’t likely to create dependency issues and thus break something when I update anything.

  • I‘d rather have a system that is stable and a few months out of date than a system that is so up to date that it breaks. Because then I cannot, in a good conscience, use that system on a device that I need to just work every time I start it.

  • Second this. Am not a huge fan of ubuntu itself and I have had issues with other debian based distros (OMV for example) but mint has always been rock solid and stable on any of my machines. The ultimate beginners distro imo.

  • Larger downstream distros like manjaro (and steamOS for that matter) can be stable. I wouldn’t call manjaro a beginners distro though, like mint would be (No Linus, there’s no apt in manjaro) but it’s very daily-driveable.

    Although, if you’re most people, just stay away from rolling release distros. There’s so little benefit unless you’re running bleeding edge hardware…

    If it‘s your first time trying linux, go with mint. It’s stable and almost every tutorial will work for you. If you know your way around a terminal already, the choice is all yours. I personally like Fedora.

  • What can I do with a jailbroken kindle that makes it worth doing instead of just using calibre?

  • Politically: it‘s evil because it’s new and was first used for the covid vaccine.

  • That’s why I recommend mint. You have all the benefits of ubuntu but without the corporate stuff. And flatpak instead of snap.

  • Wasn’t that one of the main critiques of snap/ubuntu/canonical a few years ago already?

    Among my personal dislike for its shade of purple, that has been my primary reason to not recommend ubuntu for a while, at least.