Not sure why you’re being down voted. This has been my experience as well.
The remaining battery estimate given at the beginning of the trip is fairly accurate.
Not sure why you’re being down voted. This has been my experience as well.
The remaining battery estimate given at the beginning of the trip is fairly accurate.
Your want your media volume to link to your media folder outside of docker.
Below volume definition line is outside:inside
-v /home/user/media/data:/media
docker run -d
–name my_container
-v my_volume:/path/inside/container
image_name
I name my machines after my cats.
Question about the viewing habits data. Is this only related to the Free Ad Supported Streaming content Plex pushes or are they also tracking viewing habits of users personal libraries?
I like your setup.
My stack is R730s with MD1200 DAS. Using about 380watts.
Is your nas on Ext4?
That’s a power efficient setup, nice!
They killed Google Domains?!
Restic to multiple repositories, local and remote.
I think the delay is due to syncing historic backlog on the community. Not 100% sure though.
On my instance it says that some communities are fully synced so it looks like there is zero delay. So long as lemmy.world or lemmy.ml are working on their end.
I’m liking Lemmy a lot. I rolled my own instance so performance is great. The only issue is delayed federation of new posts, but comments seem to go through instantly.
I’d also like an answer and insight into this question.
I think it depends on your scale. If homelab stuff docker is awesome IMO.
In the article. Free Ad Supported sTreaming = FAST.
All the embedded LIVE TV or Movies from Plex are all ad supported streaming media not coming from your own Plex server.
I don’t want any of that on my Plex instance and the focus on FAST has been a clear shift in strategy.
Fully agree
Plex has been going downhill for a bit now. FAST is killing it.
I agree. Run everything you want and then when you see performance degradation then you’ll know the limits of your hardware based on your workloads.
You already have the NUC so why not push it’s limits? The alternative is to try and guestimate your workload needs and buy matching hardware… which is very difficult.