

A whole generation of kids missed out on learning movie theater etiquette
A whole generation of kids missed out on learning movie theater etiquette
I liked this movie a lot. Yeah, it’s kinda silly in its concept, but the execution of it was deeply satisfying.
I’ve heard that KDE has a cube effect
I use Mint for my main gaming PC, FWIW, totally rock solid
Another thing you might want to try is Mint with the Mate DE, which is based on old GNOME 2 code (and therefore can load the old add-ons like the 3D desktop cube etc)
I’d recommend CachyOS if you’re trying to squeeze the best gaming performance out of the hardware
Sure, it could be done client-side in theory. In practice, the Jellyfin team consider it outside of the scope of the project, so now you’re talking about building or modifying a third-party client and directing all of your servers’ users to use that client. This also only works for users who have a device that can run said client.
My intention was to do it server-side in such a way that it would seamlessly work with any client
Jellyfin does not support federation between multiple server instances the way Plex does, unfortunately. I was working on a project to enable direct server-to-server federation but once I got into the details it became clear that it was going to be a difficult problem that would require a separate server apps combined with a plug-in for Jellyfin on each end. Even then, Jellyfin isn’t made to support e.g. servers being down, except by failing to stream a file, which doesn’t have a good way to convey to the user that the file is temporarily unavailable vs broken/bad
I’m gonna be that guy:
inciteful
insightful is the right word here. As in “full of insight”.
Incite is pronounced the same but it refers to instigating or provoking, e.g. “incite a riot”, so something that’s insightful could also be inciteful if you’re inferring something embarrassing about someone to try to start a fight
Jellyfin can read nfo files on disk and you can set it to never modify the files, or you could set Jellyfin to keep all of its metadata in its own DB and never put metadata in the same folder with the media files. Either way it’s entirely doable to prevent a metadata loop like you’re describing
It organizes and renames files and also syncs your watch statuses for shows. Basically it works as a complete library management tool. It also checks the file hashes for anime against AniDB, so it’s more reliable at getting the metadata right.
Skill issue