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2
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375
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Usenet is usually a lot faster, for most things you can basically max out your bandwidth (or whatever the max you set your download client to) instead of it being determined by the number and quality of seeders. Newer releases torrents also download very fast, but after a few months or years the seeders drop off a lot, usenet is always the same speed even if it's super old and most keep stuff indefinitely or for 10-20 years or so (longer if it's being grabbed a lot still)

    Also one nzb site is usually enough, you don't need to check a bunch of different torrent sites since it's basically one massive one. I use prowlarr so I have it check nzbgeek for everything first and a bunch of torrent sites as backups in case it isn't there, but almost everything gets grabbed from usenet

  • I'm happy to help if anyone needs help with docker and/or Linux stuff. (I'll probably try to convert you to Linux, the os to rule them all. You've been warned) Wont necessarily be everything or set it all up for you, but enough knowledge to get you started and able to learn more yourself is doable

    For op, that setup is likely overkill, most stuff will use more ram than cpu and very few self hosted apps will use the GPU at all (Plex and jellyfin are the only ones that come to mind). Only hurt to it being overkill is a higher power usage than a smaller setup, but if you already have it running full time then it's unlikely to make a different

  • For anyone looking to bail - get a nice VPN and sail the high seas instead! I use protonvpn for $120 per 2 years ($5 per month) they also have free servers you can try out but they're super slow. Another good one is mullvad for €5 per month (doesn't get cheaper with longer plans, but €5 a month isn't bad). Be wary of vpn reviews though because I know a lot are sponsored.

    Protonvpn and mullvad are based in Switzerland and Sweden, respectively, and both countries have great privacy laws. Been using protonvpn for a while and haven't had any issues personally.

    For getting into torrenting, I definitely recommend the arr suite (radarr for movies, sonarr for tv, some others for other uses) and qbittorrent for actual torrenting. Also very good idea to stick everything in docker containers, you can route them through a gluetun container that uses your VPN so even if you shut your VPN down systemwide those are still protected. The arr suite helps with managing what you get, getting better qualities, automatically getting new releases, etc.

    Plex is great for viewing your content and such, can either do one time purchase or a subscription, $120 for lifetime which is the same as paying for 3 years of subscription I think? You can also use Kodi which is free and open source but imo more annoying to setup and has a worse layout.

    There's plenty of guides online for setting things up, but make sure to never torrent without a vpn unless it's non-copyrighted

  • For books and music, I pirate them and if I genuinely like it and would buy it myself then I donate the cost directly to the artist (unless they're an artists with a stupid amount of money). For music it's kind of depends on how much I like their music, but usually I'll donate the cost of an album or something (I don't donate if they already have stupid amounts of money though). For books, I'll usually donate the cost of a paperback (5$-$10) if I liked it, or a hardcover ($25-$30)

    It comes with multiple benefits: I don't pay for something I don't like, the entire cost actually goes to the people I want to support instead of 40% or whatever going to whoever prints the books or releases the music, and I no longer have to pay subscriptions to support platforms that take advantage of small artists and pocket a significant amount of what I pay for the subscription (looking at you Amazon and Spotify)

  • My stand-ups are at 10 am (11 am for most of the team), last between 3 and 15 minutes depending on how many of the 7 of us show up and how much everyone has to say, then we all go back to what we're doing. My project manager and boss both care about the work that gets done rather than monitoring us to make sure we're working the entire time, and we actually get reasonable (even generous) timelines for most things unless it's something super important.

    I love my job.

  • rule

    Jump
  • If the web integrity API goes live and I can't use some sites because of it, it will be very nice to have a very clear filter on what websites are complete garbage for using it. Vivat librewolf + VPN!

  • Throw Linux on it or reinstall windows if you don't want to learn Linux. I assume it's a new PC, but you never know what may be on there regardless. A new install with a complete overwrite is the way to go imo.

    For Linux, it personally use arch (btw) and love it but it's not super beginner friendly. I've heard good things about Linux mint for beginners so that may be a good place to start

  • First ones that come to mind are:

    https://www.bookstackapp.com/ - sets out your uploaded data like books. Can do books, chapters, pages, etc.

    https://www.dokuwiki.org/DokuWiki - more standard wiki, also everything is stored in plain text so it's easy to distribute and use source control on (no database backend)

    https://tiddlywiki.com/ - full fledged wiki, bit different layout though since it's all on one page. Clicking an internal link scrolls to that page so it's pretty quick.

    All are free and open source, almost certain they all have docker images too. I haven't tried any of them but I've looked into them since I've been thinking about it

  • Basically if the bill passed then insurance companies would just raise the prices of premiums or other costs to make up the difference. California is making a state-sponsored insulin manufacturer to sell insulin near or at cost in the future which is a better and more sustainable solution for fixing drug proces than passing laws that could be removed or loopholed around

  • I looked into it, bazarr does have an option for looking for forced subtitles so it can handle that automatically for you too! (Also hearing impaired and exclude audio options). You can set it on a per-language basis too if you happen to speak/read multiple languages

  • Ahh, that's more difficult, but should be doable in theory. It will likely have to be done manually (not sure if bazarr has a setting for it), you'll be looking for subtitles that have "forced" in the name somewhere. I know the subtitles you can get natively in Plex sometimes offer forced versions, but I don't watch many shows with foreign language in them

  • The bazarr tip is great, especially if you use radarr and sonarr. Even without it, Plex will let you search for subtitles and can find decent ones most of the time. I ran into enough cases where tv shows didn't have subtitles so I made a bazarr docker-compose, pointed it at my movies and tv directories, and have had zero issues since. Automatically grabs it and everything, if you want subtitles on something you just downloaded you can go into the webui and search immediately instead of waiting too

  • Avoid Ubuntu, it uses flatpak. Besides that it's really personal preference. I personally love endeavouros, very easy installation process and a lot of desktop environments to choose from. Comes with some helpful initial setup tools too. It's arch Linux based and there's a ton of resources for arch too, but arch does come with a learning curve. Backups are your friend

  • Honestly that is a pretty awful experience. Proton is infinitely better for games than wine in my opinion though, I definitely recommend giving it another try. I have a good 20 games on steam from AAA to indie, the only one to have any issues was cyberpunk 2077 and even that was a simple launch command fix that I found in a couple minutes of googling the problem and it runs fine now.

    I admittedly haven't dealt with wine too much since most games can be run with proton and I avoid programs that don't support Linux, but I was able to run heavily modded Minecraft at basically the same fps as on windows with no wine tweaking. Lutris is also a good platform that can make installing non-steam games much easier

    If you want a good os to try instead of jumping ship at random, I'd recommend grabbing endeavour os and picking whatever desktop environment you like on top of it, all of their stuff looks good right out of the box and gets you a lot of the necessities. Any of their official desktop environments (except i3) are super easy to use and should be familiar to windows users, I'm a strong believer in arch superiority because if there's a problem, someone else has already fixed it and you can steal their solution even though there is a learning curve to customizing it

  • You can also transfer those files to the Linux partition directly, your file browser will (or at least should) be able to find your Windows drive or partition and let you browse all the files there, it's easy to then drag them to a folder on the Linux side and get them copied over