Skip Navigation

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/)CE
Posts
0
Comments
474
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • they do sell replacement parts for most parts.

    If you can't replace all of the parts with some other off the shelf part, regardless of quality, then you're locked to a brand and are at their mercy.

    What happens when they inevitably discontinue the A1M and no longer sell parts for it?

  • It's true for any variation of Linux. Hell, the vulnerability (Mimikatz) that was crucial in the most expensive cyber security attack in history is still there in Windows.

    And for X11 to be exploited you would need to get and run malicious code in the first place. The Linux security model kicks in before you get to that point.

  • Ok, so you're implying people were using their videos for free instead of paying for the streaming services. Then Plex wanted more money so they've started to charge people for using their own stuff.

    That's fine, and frankly I agree with that.

    But your initial reply to me is still irrelevant to the discussion.

  • It's irrelevant because even Plex themselves made no mention of their in-house streaming stuff. The discussion is about being charged to view your videos, hosted on your own self-hosted server, viewed on your own device.

  • Streaming requires high-performance, high-bandwidth machines that cost anywhere from several dozen dollars to several hundred dollars a month. You build a resilient high-availability network, and you could easily be looking at several tens of thousands of dollars a month.

    Are you under the impression that Plex uploads the movie files to their servers and then transcodes them there, or something?

    And the hard work happens on your own hardware. All Plex's servers are doing is acting as a signaling server, but no media or routed through Plex's servers.

  • Maybe they were referring to the Microsoft Halloween documents? Which were leaked on October 31 and was basically a manifesto against FOSS in general and specifically against Linux calling it "communist" software.

  • As much as I dislike Windows, it's incredibly uncommon for it to blue screen unless there's some kind of hardware fault. And if it's happening in Linux too, you've got bad/dying hardware.

    In Linux, if your system is hanging for a bit then coming back, then it's probably a drying hard drive.

    One thing you can check with is Burn In Test on Windows. It will stress all the individual components and tell you what's failing.