I use an amazon fire tv 4k, I only use it to start jellyfin. It’s perfect.
If you don’t want it to phone home, put it behind a firewall, and block all but your domains
I use an amazon fire tv 4k, I only use it to start jellyfin. It’s perfect.
If you don’t want it to phone home, put it behind a firewall, and block all but your domains
Important tool
Storage is cheap. You suggest combining the images and storing the difference.
You can’t separate the images anymore. You have to store them in a container such that you have one common base image. You can then later on decide which image to look at.
You could also take a short video and only display one image.
Avif uses a video compression algorithm, meaning it’s basically one frame of a video.
Btw, I wouldn’t care about your problem. Storage is cheap. Try saving 10 4k videos and you’ll laugh about your image library
Let’s say I work in an IT area (but not infosec)
There may have been discussions around it beforehand. I didn’t ask why it went so smooth.
I don’t have to. Matrix is coming anyway. It’s not an if but a when.
For official (internal) company communication though I will advertise matrix instead of signal. I’ll report back once I’ve talked to the right people about it.
Thx!
I wasn’t able to debug it. Maybe next year or so
I had problems with podman/selinux and jellyfin and gpu acvelleration which is why I’m on debian now. I’d go with atomic any day if I could solve the problem but I don’t know how.
Who writes it in that form? You just put a todo note into your document
What does {{CITATION NEEDED}} mean?
Wtf. Newpipe for the win
(Sorry apple users)
Likely, This is it. It transcodes and hence it has to buffer because the server isn’t strong enough. Best is to use a gpu like intel a380 as described in jellyfin’s doc.
It sends the private key? Are you sure about that?
I use a password manager. I don’t care about it. Passwords are reasonably secure.
Don’t visit the websites.
I would’ve wished
It’s important to be libre and open source.
If someone claims somefhing without source, you cant trust it.
In my experience kde is very stable. A “lot” of “instability” comes from third party features. I didn’t click on the link, btw.
I don’t own one but I agree, it ist very good. But it’s too expensive for what it is nowadays. A second hand one or maybe the next generation might be worth it again