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2 yr. ago

  • this is the only valid response to the question that was asked. save yourself the time of trying to get the license out of your existing system. you're literally on the piracy community. just generate a new license, you'll be done in maybe 30 seconds, if even that long.

  • Regarding Dropbox: Where are you seeing 9 TB for 20 $? I'm in the EU so my pricing may vary, but all I can see is the Business plan for 16 € per month per user, with a minimum of 3 users in the plan, making it cost 48 € instead. Do you have access to something else?

    Regarding Backblaze: Agreed that 50$ a month is a rough bill to pay, that sums up very fast if youre counting across the years. But their storage is also a lot more reliable than one single hard drive stored in a bank locker, with them always checking their arrays and replacing aged drives.

    Regarding Scaleway: If im reading their pricing chart right, it would cost roughly 2 € / month / TB for glacier storage, and 9 € / TB when restoring from glacier to standard storage? A big questionmark for me is how ingress works. If I'm using this for backups in case of total system failure, i'll want to upload differential backups (borg/duplicati) every couple days. How is that going to work with pricing, is that all running through standard storage driving up monthly cost, do I have to manually manage file history and deletion of older stuff or does my backup software handle that? Plus, you loose out on the instant file access that you get with Backblaze, or with something hacky like Dropbox / Onedrive. I'm still undecided which I value more, money or fast access.

  • Recently I looked into the same thing, since AWS caught my eye with their apparently ridiculously low prices. Then I found this (presumably indepdenant) review, that changed my view on things: https://b3n.org/b2-vs-s3-nas-backup/

    After reading that, I won't go with AWS. I'm currently considering to abuse the OneDrive Office Family plan, which costs 99 $ a year for 6 TB of storage (split across 6 accounts), which comes down to 1,40 $ per month per TB. A price that I have not seen beaten by other storage / backup providers.

  • Caching, DDOS and other protections, centralized DNS management of all my domains scattered around different registrars, zero trust for sensible dashboards, and most important of all: it makes me feel good that the server IP is just a tad more secret.

  • Yesnt. I know that I can run the apps I want on the homelab, have them expose their port in the local network, connect to my tailnet whenever I need access and use the homelabs local address plus port to access it. But that implies needing to connect to my tailnet whenever I want to access my service. Which is not something I can easily tell my larger family to do if I wanted to provide them with movies or a photo backup solution. So I'm trying to find a method that doesn't require a tailnet connection, which is why I was thinking of the VPS.

  • I'm pretty sure that cloudflare has a certain traffic limit on their tunnels. Nothing that's specific or disclosed, but if I were to stream from jellyfin through a tunnel, they will take down the tunnel or even the account after a while - or so I've heard.

  • Is it though? You can perfectly use this tool to keep all your running expenses in check, no matter if they're easy to forget or not. It doesn't hurt to have everything neatly summarized to compare your income against your spending, and evaluate if you need to get rid of any optional subscriptions, for example when your wage or job changes. Knowing all expenses is a vital part of budgeting.

  • "subscriptions" isnt just entertainment, you know. Rent, mortgage, car insurance, health insurance, other debt or insurance payments, money for your kids, stuff for your pets, and probably countless other options that I cannot think of in this exact moment. There are a lot of things that need regular paying that aren't fun.

  • Vouch for teamos. Haven't tried the others.

    Also it's three suggestions ;)

  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but I am pretty sure that Spaceship is a new endeavor by Namecheap themselves. With this as reasoning I've seen people advise to keep a distance from Spaceship, because it's somewhat expected to have the same (bad) customer service.

  • This actually sounds insanely cool. Without having looked at their documentation, can you make a rough statement about the required hardware power for the VPS, especially if traffic may include bandwith heavy stuff like movie streaming or large data up/downloads?

  • Would this require specific stripping flags or is a simple

     sh
        
    ffmpeg -i video.mkv -c:v copy -c:a copy out.mkv
    
    
      

    enough?

  • The amount of money they made is entirely meaningless without knowing their spending.

  • I always felt like the audio quality is similar enough to not matter - but only when one person is speaking. As soon as you're talking while others talk, there's this weird crosstalk effect that sounds absolutely horrible, and this has been in effect since Discords birth.

  • This comment piqued my interest. I've been dreaming of a trakt -> torrent integration for some time now, since I actively use trakt to manage my "watched" and "want to watch" movies. In an ideal world, whenever I add a movie to my trakt wishlist, it would automatically be grabbed from a torrent on a remote seedbox. But I could'nt find any trakt integrations on the tools you named when I researched this a couple months back. Do you have any instructing links or similar where I could read more about this?

  • me_irl

    Jump
  • Yeah, I completely forgot to acknowledge the fact that it's been screenshotted and posted to yet another social media site after instagram ... :D

  • me_irl

    Jump
  • a tweet, screenshotted and reposted on tumblr, then screenshotted and reposted on instagram. the lifecycle of memes...

  • it's a german hoster with datacenters in germany, sweden and since recently the east coast of the US. depending on where you live, hetzner is therefor not an interesting option for you (due to physical distance)

  • Keep in mind that the files received from this site are identical to the files you would get on the official store. That's why it's so beautiful.

  • The archive you download from gog-games includes some data files and a setup.exe. You launch the setup, tell it where to install, and wait. Once it's done, you launch the game from the start menu, and enjoy. There's no magic to it.