disobey2623

I've stopped recommending Plex to newcomers, because Jellyfin is ready for families now

2mon 4d ago in jellyfin@poweruser.forum from www.xda-developers.com

There seems to be a few options for that. Bazarr has some synchronisation built in, but with varying degrees of success. Here's another tool that feels more promising: https://github.com/johnpc/subsyncarr

The idea with bazarr is that, if the subtitle exists, you would already have it when you play the media on your TV. Not sure how you manually searching for the subtitle on the TV in plex would improve upon that. Bazarr has no trouble automatically finding subtitles in multiple languages at once.

At the end of the day, bazarr works just fine with Plex, why don't you try it and see if it's good enough to not need to manually find subs on your TV?

👉👈

2mon 4d ago in vegan from media.piefed.zip

"Killing humanely" is just about minimising abuse, not nullifying it. Who decides when the abuse is small enough to be called humane? The slaughterhouses marketing their slaughtering as humane.

LazyVim: The Neovim Distro I Wish I'd Started With

2mon 9d ago in neovim@programming.dev from samuellawrentz.com

For someone who just wants a sane editor, I don't need not care for seeing up my own config or keeping up to date with neovim plugins. Like you mention vim.pack, but why should I add a user need to keep up with which plugins has the latest congenital features?

The advantage of a distro is that somebody else sets up sane defaults, keeps plugins up to date and uses the latest cool plugins. All without me needing to spend any time reading documentation and trying to set up a new plugin. And it still allows me full customization, where it's easy to add or disable plugins.

Essentially all a distro does is move the starting point from a very basic text editor to a fairly advanced text editor. So to me it feels like a no brainier to use as my base, because somebody with 10x my experience with vim will be better at designing a work flow with vim than I will.

This Phishing email... What is the IP?

3mon 2d ago in programmer_humor@programming.dev from programming.dev

Hope it went well!

Each number between the dots is made up of 8 bits, so each one is a maximum of 255.

Permanently Deleted

3mon 2d ago in mildlyinfuriating

Nowhere near how? I don't think I've ever seen an ad with Firefox + ublock in several years of use. How can brave be better?

https://archive.is/yIkXA

Many people talking about using subdomains, but that's only really a thing if you actually have a domain. Just last year the domain .internal was reserved for internal use, so that's what I've set up all my domains to use. E.g. https://pihole.internal/,https://proxmox.internal/.

To make this work I use pihole's local dns records to rewrite any *.internal domain to point to my reverse proxy Caddy's ip.

As for the certificates, I created my own CA, which I install on all my and my family's devices. Then, for each new url I set up, I create a new certificate and sign it with my CA certificate, then have my reverse proxy serve it.

This all sounds like a lot of work, and it is, but using OPNsense for both reverse proxy and certificates makes it well integrated and certificates are trivial to renew. With that said, if you have your own domain, go the let's encrypt subdomain route instead imo. It saves you a lot of manual labor with setting up your CA on every device you own and creating new certificates for each site.

I usually explain it like email, most people get it then. Doesn't matter if you're using outlook.com or gmail.com when sending an email, you can talk to users on either as long as you specify the server address (which is mandatory in email anyway).

VoE nerf patch is here

6mon 10d ago in guildwars2@lemmy.wtf from en-forum.guildwars2.com

Issues with sign ins

7mon 23d ago in guildwars2@lemmy.wtf from lemmy.dbzer0.com