

Note this only works if your CPU has on-board graphics like most Intel chips (non KF variant) or AMD’s G series processors.


Note this only works if your CPU has on-board graphics like most Intel chips (non KF variant) or AMD’s G series processors.


Keep in mind QBit uses kibibyte units while your ISP reports speeds in megabits. You can also set it to change speeds depending on the time of day. I have mine limited during the hours I typically have people streaming from my server and have it uncapped from like 2am - 8am.


There may have been a difference at one point before WD realized what people were commonly using these for, but I was previously using 5 shucked Elements and one MyBook (all 8TB) bought between 2018 and 2024 and they were all the same white label drives.


I havent seen inside a MyPassport but the MyBook is just a standard 3.5" SATA drive with a USB controller attached. For the smaller form factor, I’d imagine they’re more integrated and not able to be shucked which means it could, in theory, be less reliable if the control board broke, but this is just speculation and the odds of that happening are probably pretty low.
Could it be mumified human skin?


Foundation (tv show) and Tron: Ares are also very visually appealing works.


They sound made up but convey the meaning well enough. “Talk about your experience with Bible-thumping peers”


Ive been using AirVPN since Mullvad dropped port forwarding and it has been decent and reasonably priced. The only issue I’ve had was with their “Eddie” client for Windows. I fixed this by using (I think, or something similarly named) WireSock with an AirVPN Wireguard config which also gave me the ability to do split tunneling easily but I only used this for a few months before building a new server running Proxmox
I think ProtonVPN also has the feature but costs a bit more. Private Internet Access is another cheap option but their owners are shady (I had them before Mullvad until they got sold to a company with ties to Israeli spyware makers IIRC)


You shouldn’t even be using Mullvad for torrenting as they had to get rid of their port forwarding feature some time ago. This means youll only be able to connect to individuals who do have port forwarding setup and no one else.
In any case the best solution is to link your torrent client to the VPN interface as it will cease operation if it loses connection and prevent leaks.


As someone with no PS experience or other baggage weighing me down, I find the default UI to be insanely unintuitive. Im not even sure what the panels on the right or bottom are for, the left toolbar panel randomly disappears on me occasionally and I can never figure out how to get it back without closing and reopening GIMP. Things like Crop don’t seem to do anything obvious. Painting with the brush doesn’t work unless you first use the selection tool to draw a box around the area you want to use the brush. Etc, etc, etc. Some of this is obviously just because I’m a novice, and I manage to fumble my way through things, but at the same time it could be drastically simplified for simple tasks. It feels like a tool that was built for people who already knew how to use it.


My guess is a low cost, thin cast iron pan


Fair enough but has anyone actually audited how secure Jellyfin is when exposed directly to the open internet? Not even the actual developers of the software recommend that, yet the majority of the replies here are being overly smug and cocky thinking it’s perfectly safe to do so.


Obvious troll account.


Note that opening a port gives full access to that port to the next higher Network. Opening a port directly to the Internet is therefore insecure and not recommended.
It says so right there.
There are multiple ways of exposing Jellyfin to the outside - the most common ones are:
forwarding its Ports directly to the internet (not recommended!)
forwarding through a Reverse Proxy
using a VPN connection to enter the Network
use a VPS to Reverse Proxy to your home network
And there.
This smug mentality that security is unnecessary when exposing ports to the open internet reminds me of people who think its fine to drive drunk because “I’ve done it dozens of times before and nothing happened!” It also reminds me of the mentality of tech company VPs right before they have a massive data breach. It’s quite absurd to read.


This seems like a naive viewpoint as you’re exposing your whole network and everything connected to it to the open internet. Just because the port connects to Jellyfin doesnt mean there isn’t some exploit or vulnerability that can allow for greater access. This is media software written by volunteers and offered for free, so I wouldn’t expect Fort Knox security from it just because its FOSS. In fact, they specifically put the onus on the user to do this themselves if they so chose.


Previously you could pay a one time fee to watch remotely on Android and iOS without having the Plex Pass and now it sounds like they’re rolling this into the Plex Pass and asking users to pay again.


Not necessarily the same drive but the same pool. I have a ZFS pool with 6 drives and can use hardlinks just fine.


Im talking about face to face. When you speak to someone online it becomes a lot blurrier but I would err on the side of an LLM until proven otherwise.


Ive had decent luck watching things stuck at 99.9% and having it work fine. Sometimes it’s just an .nfo file or the like thats missing.
Depends on the dilution rate.