Okay, nice! But now the question is: Does this work with Lidarr on Steroids, so that it can use deemix for both metadata and downloading? ^^
This is madness but it is GLORIOUS madness!
Okay, nice! But now the question is: Does this work with Lidarr on Steroids, so that it can use deemix for both metadata and downloading? ^^
I mean as far as I know it is possible to browse the folders directly in Jellyfin, at least using the web app. There was an option for it in the settings I think. But implementing that for Finamp might be a bit harder, sorry
Yeah I ideally Flutter (the framework we’re using to develop the app) would support this by default, but it seems like we’ll have to jerryrig something…
Hi, Finamp dev here. I think there might be a “limit 100” on accident in there somewhere, since that is our default “page size”, so the number of items we will fetch from the server at once.
If you don’t mind, you could open an issue on GitHub or hop into the discord server so I can better keep track of it!
Finamp works on iOS. We just launched a beta on TestFlight. It still has a long way to go, but all the important features should be there!
Take a look: https://github.com/jmshrv/finamp
(I am one of the devs)
how long did it take you to upload this image?
That’s really awesome! I’ll hold off from trying this for one or two updates, hopefully by then Immich will automatically create albums based on the folder structure as well.
And some solid library sharing feature would also go a long way towards sharing (old) family photos with the whole family!
Immich actually organizes your photos in a simple directory structure, which is customizable (want to group by year? year+month? by day? not at all?). The images are right there in your file system and have the original file name.
The directory is “read-only” though, for the same reason as there is a need to import existing libraries: database synchronization.
Immich offers many features that require a database or pre-processing of files, which makes it fast and feature-rich. If you modify files outside of Immich, it cannot know what changed and loses track of where your media is.
As I said, the (read-only) file structure is always there in case you want to switch.
The bundle is also cheaper if you already have Limbo!
They probably meant that through the tunnel you can get to one of these ports, because the HTTP requests are forwarded there. Should only work for HTTP(S) though
Just remove everything that looks like a semicolons, problem solved. You don’t need semicolons in JS
Giving 10 bucks a year, even though I use it very little. But sometimes it’s just easy and quick to look something up or read an interesting article, and I know that there are many people (students, etc.) who rely on it more than I do and have less money to spend
What filenames are you using? I’d imagine the filename is pretty important for getting the metadata. It might also help to add the year to the show folder.
My normal naming scheme is like this:
"{show name} ({year})"
|__ "Season 1"
|__ "{show name} - {season number}x{episode number}"
|__ "Season 2"
|_ ...
Ah okay, wouldn’t have thought that it would be reliable enought to pull this off.
In that case, you might want to look at some kind of knowledge base AI, like danswer. There are others, which might be better suited, but I can’t seem to find them right now.
Yeah, JF uses it as an alternative to Chromecast. There should be an API for it, as the server handles all of the communication
Is sonarr/radarr a hard requirement? Would be interested in just using this as an alternative frontend for jellyfin
Didn’t know something like this existed at all! (so no idea of there are alternatives)
I’m super curious about your experiences and use case though! Care to share some insights?
Paid: Poweramp, Symfonium, Shuttle2
Free: Musicolet
I’ve gone the TrueNAS SCALE route myself, with TN running on bare metal. All my containers/apps are set up through it, and I’ve also spun up Windows and Linux VMs without major issues, including GPU and USB passthrough.
I do enjoy the security it gives me, will all my apps being versioned/snapshotted regularly and before every update, as well as the rest of my data. Since TN is only using ZFS and not something like MergerFS (which I believe is used by Unraid), the upgrade path is a bit mote restricted. So you should definitely look into your options up-front. For example, you won’t be able to expand a vdev (virtual ZFS disk) later on, you’ll have to create a new one. And you can only use equivalent vdevs to form pools. That means if you start with 3 drives in a vdev for your main storage pool, you can only expand that pool by adding anothet 3 drives with the same capacity as a secons vdev. So make sure you can stomach these costs, or go for fewer and cheaper drives, with a large case.
As for apps, you can set up docker apps easily, and there are a large number of officially or community-maintained apps, where any breaking changes and migrations are handled for you, so updating is a breeze. But you don’t have a much flexibility as with a custom setup. TN has been becoming more generic in that regard though, switching from k3s to regular docker, so you could probably play around with stuff via the CLI without major issues.
Oh and one more thing: you should probably use a separate, dedicated device for Home Assistant. Use a Raspberry Pi or one of their official boards, and you’ll have better support, more features, redundancy, and can still create backups on your NAS via SMB.
Such a second device that is also connected via Tailscale doesn’t hurt either, just in case.