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ridel

ridel@lemmy.world
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I accomplished this and found it was pretty easy. Like everyone else said, just point the volumes to the right directories. Backup your Plex data (not the media) a few times in case you screw up and it starts to index existing files as if it were old files.

Probably the hardest part for me was ‘claiming’ the server using their startup token. And even then that was fairly easy.

You’re hosting on Ubuntu so this isn’t a problem, but PMS basically requires its own IP on your intranet (not the Docker internal subnet) so Mac’s Docker implementation fails to provide this capability.

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Time vs money, right? In six months, I’ll forget about the NAS and all the tiny little things I never did / automate. It’ll come back to bite me.

With a purchased NAS, that’s… less likely? Or at least, I can yell at their support to help me.

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Go used. Lots of people get rid of their hardware when just a bit of care and repairs will make it as useful as brand new.

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You have no power outages? Or you UPS your fridge? That’s commitment.

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Plexamp is really great software – the various methods of randomizing means I’m re-experiencing parts of my music collection like new, and connecting tracks to other tracks that I’d never put in the same playlist.

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Feels like you’re proposing a distinction that isn’t universal, and literally there are words (on and off-site) that describe the concept better than the term self-hosted.

Additionally, just because some of the physical infrastructure (the hardware) isn’t in your control doesn’t make it any less self-hosted. I’m sure there are some that own their building and electrical infrastructure too. Meanwhile I’m a schmuck that has to rent and pay a utility provider for electrical. That’s not particularly far from datacenter access.

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