47 points

I miss the days I only needed 2 tb

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13 points

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.

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4 points

I hope you’re seeding those hard to finds!

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2 points

I was but after two reimages I’m not even sure which torrents they were.

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11 points

For me, that would have been over 15 years ago. Even my NAS from 2014 was pushing 16T or so.

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5 points

Yeah, I’m at 28T and I’m eying some 18T drives for an expansion unit.

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6 points

Just wait until you get where I am… I am pushing north of 140T of overall storage right now, lol. And, it keeps growing.

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2 points

I wish them nicely quiet Red Plus drives would go to to 20 or 22TB.

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37 points
Deleted by creator
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8 points

MS has a huge collection of banned cartoons and it’s glorious.

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6 points

Make sure you have that stuff backed up, that’s valuable lol

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2 points

These kinds of conversations make me miss WASTE.

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2 points

do you share it? I would like to take a peek

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4 points
Deleted by creator
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34 points

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

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54 points

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.

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47 points

more like a streaming service you populate yourself.

The most concise description of Plex/Jellyfin that I’ve seen

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14 points

DIY Netflix is the one I like.

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9 points

As a long time Plex uset who loves the ease of use of Plex, is it for me? Also there probably aren’t apps on that many devices? My main concern is Android TV and the Tizen thing by Samsung.

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15 points

The advantages ofjellyfin are mainly its open source nature, and lack of needing to pay to unlock features such as downloads. It may be a little more effort to set up but still isn’t too difficult. Once set up, it works pretty much flawlessly, except for the occasional hiccup which can be resolved pretty easily.

It has an official app available for android TV, which is in the store, and as for Tizen OS, there is an official app (on their github), however it is somewhat more difficult to install from what i’ve seen.

If you want to check availability, there is a list of clients at https://jellyfin.org/downloads/clients/all/

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14 points

Jellyfin is to Plex as Lemmy is to Reddit.

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6 points
*

It lacks some of the functions found in plex, most notably the sync feature. That being said, it’s still a very good free alternative to plex. It does run on android tv

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3 points
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Android is no problem at all, Tizen however is a mistake I will never do again. I have a MU7000 samsung TV (2017 model), it has plex (came free in its store) but no emby (emby is another option that is mostly open source) or jellyfin (Emby fork that is fully open source). I had an Intel NUC5 celeron based that acted as a server, the cpu was pretty efficient (6w) but it was not powerful enough for transcoding (converting the video to something the tv can play)

My experience with my Samsung TV.

Plex: Can direct play almost anything (stream to the tv without converting the video). I’m a non-native english japanese anime fan who needs subtitles all the time. The problem is that plex will turn to transcoding if subtitles are on and my server was not powerful enough to handle fluent transcoded stream.

Emby: it is not in the tizen store (at least for my tv), fortunately the emby team release a tizen binary that can be installed through a USB thumb drive. Now emby works pretty good with and withouth subtitles. It does not have ads (for premium subscription) on android but it does have a once every 24h add in the Tizen version. Not a big deal but just remember you are more likely to be treaded a 2nd class consumer for having a damn Tizen TV.

Jellyfin: Not available on Samsung store, I had to enable devlopper mod on my tv and install Tizen studio with CLI on my pc to compile Jellyfin for my TV, then install it through Tizen CLI only to be surprised by how sluggish it worked, the UI was very unoptimized which is natural as it was not supporting my tv to begin with. Half my remote (samsung one remote black version) did not work so I decided it was not worth it.

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2 points

I’ve used plex and emby, both are good but plex is easier to setup and share, and has apps everywhere. Emby is a close second, but jellyfin isnt there yet imo, with apps and availability of those apps on everything.

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2 points

Possibly. You should be fine as far as apps go. The setup is a little more involved but the work is front-loaded. Once it’s set up, it’s very similar, if a bit less visually appealing. It supports some extra media types and such but really the main advantages are it being FOSS, privacy respecting, and having all features completely free.

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1 point

It’s been almost a year since I checked it out, but I had a lot of issues with jellyfin compared to plex. Mainly transcoding would never work, so streaming outside of my local network never worked well.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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11 points

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.

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3 points

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

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2 points

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.

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2 points

Not sure about Jellyfin, but Plex has a related app ErsatzTV that might be exactly what you’re looking for

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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23 points

didn’t take me long to go from 2tb being a lot to 100tb being not enough.

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3 points

Jesus, I’m struggling to fill my 24TB already; I have no idea how I’d fill 100TB

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4 points

Just download all the porn of Youporn. I believe they hit the 100 TB threshold like a decade ago.

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2 points

bro.

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16 points

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?

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34 points

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

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10 points
*

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.

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7 points

Personally I prefer jellyfins interface. Plus its easy for my bon tech familyyto use jellyfin

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3 points

I just recently set up jellyfin as a way for my family to access the stored media outside of my house. Our current Networking setup doesn’t play nicely with VPNs so this was an easy way to do that.

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15 points

NAS vs Jellyfin isn’t really how to look at it. You still need to have the files stored somewhere, and Jellyfin can just access the files from wherever you store them. As others say, Jellyfin adds some convenience. Think of it like Netflix but for your local files. You can install an app on your phone, laptop, tablet, or just access Jellyfin’s built in web interface on laptop/etc… It pulls down thumbnails and show information automatically, and you can set up different accounts/profiles to track show progress and favorites for multiple people.

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14 points

The files are still stored on a NAS.

But, Jellyfin/Plex has the advantage you get a nice pretty “app” that works on your TV/Roku/AndroidTV/etc. It handles transcoding if needed, keeps track of what you have watched, and lets you know when new things pop up.

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12 points

It keeps track of which files you’ve played (e.g. to automatically pick the next episode in a series), it automatically downloads metadata and cover art so you have a nice browsing interface, it manages multiple profiles so that e.g. you can limit your kids’ access to only G and TV-Y or filter out genres a user doesn’t like, it lets you set parental controls to limit the amount of time watched in a day (or disable it at certain times of day), etc.

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9 points

Jellyfin and plex are basically just GUIs to make playing videos from your NAS feel like you’re using a streaming service. They do a bunch more stuff, but in general that’s what they’re for.

Like, you don’t need a GUI for Linux, but it can certainly make the experience better.

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9 points
*

I use both plex and jellyfin and my files are on a nas. Previously truenas but now synology. I just mount my collection over smb to my Intel nuc with quick sync so that Plex/jellyfin can provide me and my friends a slick UI as well as transcoding (can store stuff in hevc, flac, 5.1 or 7.1 dts hd ma and not worry about codec support on each device), a nice web player with subtitles /audio track selection, and nice apps on every device to access the collection.

But yeah NAS and jellyfin aren’t mutually exclusive, many people use them together.

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5 points
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Jellyfin/Plex/Emby turn your media collection into your own personal Netflix. They have apps for multiple platforms, you can setup user access controls, parental controls based off age ratings, track progress through shows and movies, search and organize based off genre and tags, and much more. Also, they can handle on the fly transcoding of the media, so if a device doesn’t support a specific codec or container it can be converted into another, or if the user is on a poor Internet connection which can’t handle a 4K video, it can downgrade the quality to make it easier to stream on the poor connection.

Overall, they just provide a better experience when consuming media.

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3 points

Also, they’re not exclusive. I have a nas with more space but essentially no ability to transcode media, so I’ve mounted that volume via NFS on a laptop I run jellyfin which gives me excellent transcoding and a very smooth experience.

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