• balderdash@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    There’s a large possibility that your kids will be apathetic towards the media that you watch now. When’s the last time you listened to a song or watched tv from the 50?

    (I can hear you typing right now; yes, I myself even watch the Adams Family and listen to psychedelic rock every now and again, but that’s not typical.)

    • Omega_Jimes@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I’ve had to start trimming things, but I can’t get rid of hard-to-finds. It’s mostly new shows, I’ll only keep recent seasons.

      I can’t lose shows like Captain Star or Duckman, but I probably don’t need every season of Westworld.

  • DavidDoesLemmy@aussie.zone
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    1 year ago

    Maybe a dumb question, but how is this better than having your files on a nas? I have a nas and just play my media files from there on my tv and laptop. What do I get from having jellyfin?

    • Barky@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      A slick interface with nice title cards and pictures, feels like your own personal streaming service with no drawback

      • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Kodi/XBMC has been providing that for like 20 years though…

        What jellyfin does provide that Kodi doesn’t is on the fly transcoding for watching on mobile device and remote access. If you don’t need that, Kodi might be a better choice providing a far wider array of features.

          • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            That’s fine, but it still doesn’t do a tenth of what Kodi can do.

            I also don’t really see how it’s easier in terms of browsing. It’s a list of movies and tv shows…

            • frozenicecube@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              You’re not wrong but there are still drawbacks to Kodi where Jellyfin ends up being better. In my use case, with 5 tvs in the house, 2 are hooked up to Nvidia shield tvs but the other 3 are Chromecast w/ Google TV which have very limited storage unless I want to spend a fortune in hubs for each one to add a USB drive or micro SD.

              With kodi installed I would regularly hit the storage limit of the device and have all kinds of weird bugs. Just as an example I had my daughter set up with a kids only account, but account switching would cause Kodi to become unresponsive for anywhere from 30 seconds to having to do a hard reset of the device. Jellyfin gives me the same access to my library with a lighter, more streamlined, persistent interface across devices and with easy and fast profiles. It still allows me to keep a pi as the host so the whole setup is low power (important for me as we’re on solar, every watt helps!)

              I don’t really need the Kodi plugins I used to have if the main purpose of streaming my local content isn’t smooth and simple for the family. This is coming from a long time XBMC user, I’ve been running it since my original modded Xbox in the early 2000s.

              • wildbus8979@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                Then you are doing it wrong. I have three instances of Kodi, one of them on completely hard drive less machine booted via PXE, the other two are Pis with minimal is on an SD card. All the media’s are stored on a NAS, and all the metadata is shared between the instances on MySQL, all of it (profiles, views, etc) shared across all the instances.,

  • tun@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    When the time comes for them to watch, they have their own version of our favorites - remake or remastered, adaptations or whole different series.

    Now the collection is for the dads’ nostalgia.

    • Kalash@feddit.ch
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      1 year ago

      Have you seen the recent remakes of disney Films?

      Let’s just say, they won’t become timeless classics like the original animated movies.

      • Khalic@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        idk, coco was pretty memorable

        Edit: my bad, you were talking about the remakes

    • theoldman@infosec.pub
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      1 year ago

      How does one get a NAS without spending an arm and leg these days? I started pirating because I was broke, I don’t have triple digits to spend on hardware.

      An old PC with a bunch of hard drives (they shouldn’t be NAS drives necessarily) + TrueNas. The main cost will be the hard drives which is about 20$/TB

      • Majestic@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        $20/TB is a bad deal.

        You can get WD Red Pro’s on sale twice a year for $16/TB.

        Further you can order unused data center and enterprise drives for anything from $11-$16/TB and those things are built to take way more use and abuse than home users can throw at them.

        I would not pay above $17/TB for traditional magnetic spinning disk storage.

        • Baut [she/her] auf.@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          That’s like incredibly less than what I have been able to find. Where exactly would they be on sale for that cheap?
          Don’t want to buy used since you never know when they will go south on you

          • Majestic@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            https://diskprices.com/

            Beware MDD at the top is alleged to sell drives they’ve refurbished which are essentially used but with wiped smart. Other cheap deals… check sellers. If it’s not sold and shipped by Amazon it could be slightly used drives (usually third party sellers do a mix so some people get brand new, others not so much). Also beware third party sellers and Amazon itself often sell OEM drives without warranty. I always check the serials online before opening the anti-static bag to make sure it’s in warranty.

            Also: shucks.top

            You need to wait and watch for the good deals but they come around multiple times a year.

            Also, understand there are certain storage ranges to get these prices. Generally 8-18TB drives are best deals per TB. You pay a premium for 20-22 top size drives as well as for smaller drives like 2-4TB. 14TB seems to be the current sweet spot most of the time.

            Lastly. Understand SMR drives are alright for backups but not ideal for streaming high bitrate content from or using to seed files. CMR is better.

              • Majestic@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                Looking up technical specs for the drive it’s often mentioned on data sheets (often as conventional magnetic recording drive or else shingled if SMR). Other than that third parties have compiled lists and many but not all Amazon pages in tech specs mention it if you look closely. Try searching drive-model and cmr and then smr and see what comes up. Beware some drive families different sizes of drive may be cmr vs smr. WD red pro and ultra star DC line are all CMR, WD blues many are SMR. WD black as far as I know are all CMR. WD red (non-pro) can be SMR I believe.

                I’ll be honest, the real difference is getting a 7200 vs 5400 RPM drive, particularly one with a larger cache, I’d always go for 7200 except for purely offline backup stuff.

                In terms of external drives and shucking, it’s largely a crapshoot. You can try searching what drives others found in a model, however they’re subject to change.

                Bottom line: If money is tight and it’s just you, you can absolutely do SMR and 5400 RPM external drives and have a smooth experience as long as we’re talking re-encodes not raw Blu-ray remuxes (I have seen an external 5400RPM SMR drive choke and fail trying to smoothly play a file at 24MB/s bitrate but it worked fine with 10MB/s re-encodes, even those with burst rates of 17MB/s). If you can afford a bit more try to go 7200 and CMR.

          • Majestic@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            OP said money was tight.

            And why pay more for less? Over the purchase of 3 hard drives I save enough to get a fourth “free” off the difference in savings.

            $4x14tb=$56 for example.

            But please. Continue to pay whatever you want. More cheap drives for me.

  • ArugulaZ@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Jellyfin? What is that, some computer based television network you populate and schedule yourself? Because I totally would want that. That would rule.

    • Whom@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      It’s a FOSS alternative to Plex, if you’re familiar with that. Less like a tv channel, more like a streaming service you populate yourself.

    • bizzmarquee@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      What you’re describing is something I’ve been on the lookout for, still looking!

      • CarbonConscious@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        It was mentioned elsewhere, but ErsatzTV does exactly that. You can set up channels, build playouts, set schedules, and even do things like adding pre-rolls, fillers, commercials, and watermarks. Really neat project.

    • devdad@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Unsure if your asking seriously (if not, whooosh to me), but it’s an open source alternative to Plex.

      Plex is a media server that you run to host your TV shows and movies. Think of a self-hosted Netflix.

  • Roundcat@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Goes through hard drive with kid

    “Everything the light touches, is our kingdom!”