I’m going through Voyager now and I feel like they do this nonsense more than any of the other Treks thus far.
I’m going through Voyager now and I feel like they do this nonsense more than any of the other Treks thus far.
All 3 Mass Effect games!
Run Doom on them?
Before I get on a plane (and when I’m too cheap to pay for the in-air wifi) I’ll download directly from Jellyfin onto my device before getting on the plane. VLC will play just about anything that you’ve got running on Jellyfin from there.
Kindle.
ADHD usually means that I’ll stop mid-word and want to read something else. If I have all my books in one place, I can still sit in my comfy chair and switch, instead of wasting further hours perusing my library and getting lost in memories of acquiring each book.
It’s the 138th rule.
Currently, everything is setup on my main desktop which is currently on a battery backup as well as my modem and router since we occasionally have a “blink” in the power which could frack up my entire setup. I’ll move to a proper NAS setup with a mini-PC eventually, but it’s not a priority.
I use Jellyfin as a whole “Netflix” experience, where the library is always expanding and nothing ever leaves the library unless I just get annoyed (looking at you, Netflix ATLA). I’ve got about 20TB of space spread across three drives and backups of everything, so whatever sparks my whimsy to add to the library gets added. Someone quips, “Bears, Beets, Battlestar Galactica” and I think, “Hm…maybe I should Battlestar Galactica to my Jellyfin?” I add it, and it’s just there whenever I’m ready.
I’ve shared with 8 friends and family so far. They don’t all use it constantly; some forget about it, some watch it all day and night for like 5 days in a row, some ask for something and watch immediately, others ask for stuff and don’t watch ever.
I have to add that Jellyfin has actually been life-changing for me. Prior to Jellyfin, my solution was a cheap laptop attached to each TV in the house that held a fair amount of my total content via smaller external drives, and there was no cohesiveness, so I could never “get into” shows because I’d have to remember where I’d left off, and make sure the files were copied to the relative laptop, or somehow try to stream from the main desktop through Windows Network which didn’t always connect.
Now, have access to every single part of my collection on all three TVs, and share with my friends and family who have given up on paying for 7 different streaming apps, and also I have access to everything when I travel.
I just wish that I was adept in some language so I could actively help with a project I love so much. ☺️
To be fair, it’s not like he purposefully planned for Alexander. He was just sort of thrust upon him and he wasn’t in a position to really adapt well.
This reminds me…I probably should do a full backup of my server sometime soon.
I don’t think I understand your original question then.
If you want your jellyfin on your own domain like Oliper202020.com, that requires owning a domain which requires registration which incurs a cost.
If you don’t want to pay for something, just use a DNS service to redirect through their domain instead.
Yeah you create the subdomain and use their domain. It’s a free DNS service that prevents you from having to buy your own domain and host and setup all the DNS security yourself.
Have you thought about using DuckDNS.org?
I run mine through them (it’s free) because I couldn’t work through using my own hosting since my host makes things super complicated.
Please don’t. This is great!
Yep. I figured this is what had happened and it definitely worked on me. 🙃
Because the last film called “Star Trek 5” was so great???
DS9 is the proper choice.
I purchased a new (to me) car the other day. Despite my age, this is the first time I’ve done this all on my own and I’m geeked over my credit score. ☺️
This is so awesome!
I was actually thinking about buying a new TV just so I could have the Jellyfin all through webOS. 😅
Dude…not everything needs to be shared with the group.
The writers: We are smart.