Best I can offer is a ruby icon

Jellyfin user here, glad I dodged the bullet when I had to pick between it and plex.
Tl;dr you want something like plex to:
- manage your media files for you
- get metadata for extra features (eg. show me similar movies, select an actor from the cast and see all your media with that actor, etc)
- track your watch progress
- play on several devices (tv, mobile, pcs consoles)
- transcode media to a compatible format for your client device
- share your media library with your family
- get notified of related media being released (new season of a show or new movie onba series)
And the biggest one for me
- tidy up ripped dvd/br movie collection, download missing CC or subtitles
- create a self-hosted alternative to shitty subscription services
Have you tried Synching? If you only need transferring files back and forth and no version control or snapshot-like backups, that might be even simpler
Tried OCIS a while back and its way faster than NC syncing files, even the initial sync was so fast I didn't trust it was fully done (but it was).
That being said, OCIS is missing several key features I daily use: namely proper DAV support (contacts, calendar, todo, journal, etc) as well as integrations for stuff like SeedVault for mobile backups.
Here's an idea: on your android device use something like Insular to create a work profile, that way you get its own VPN slot, add your selfhosted-related apps there along with Tailscale. You can keep ProtonVPN on for your other apps, while using TS for your "LAN away from home" stuff. Since Tailscale already encrypts all traffic, you don't have to worry about HTTPS, certs, et al.
Not even that, fedora has added for a few versions codecs and proprietary stuff as opt-in "third party repos" during user account creation.
Just put bazzite and enjoy, it takes away all the tinkering
Oh no, don't take it as "don't reinvent the wheel"! I meant it in the true sense that sometimes we spent so much effort and focus building something, just to post about it somewhere and getting a reply "Oh nice, it's exactly like X project!".
Currently I'm running NextCloud on prem, so DavX5 and JTXBoard cover most of my note taking and todo tasks, and I guess one could deploy the server-side encryption module on a NextCloud AIO on a VPS and keep everything (probably) safe and private. I'm kinda lazy too, that's why I liked the hands-off maintenance of NC-AIO. I get notifications to update stuff, and I get regular security audits from NC itself.
BTW, never take that "doing stuff already done" is in detriment of helping FOSS projects. There are tons of examples of people randomly tinkering around and accidentally finding some huge fix for other projects. Off the top of my head, some weeb wanted to play Nier Automata at decent framerates on wine and a few years later, here we are with DXVK and all the proton stuff making most stuff playable!
Daaaad
Really interested on seeing this, although if I could make a suggestion, start by scouting around and see if you can adapt FOSS apps, maybe fork them and add/remove features to please your objectives and tastes.
Although I'm eager to see these through, I like projects like murena (/e/OS) that cobble together good Foss projects into a single cohesive ecosystem (without making the word ecosystem gross and vendor locked in like in most cases)
Cut them some slack?! They've got all the slack already!
If you rummage through the steam folder, the old sound is still there!
Even if ubi were doing fine I doubt we'd ever seen it, and if we ever so, I expect another DNF case
And Beyond Good and Evil 2
Having had similar hardware and reading about your preferences let me throw some cents in the hat:
Sim stuff runs mostly ootb. I don't have a fancy rig, but both my G29 and x52 pro work perfectly fine. At most, some games will map the axis wrong, but that's easily fixable (eg. AMS2 swaps clutch and brakes and inverts all axis). The insullary apps such as TrackIR and controller stuff is already available, although not official. There's Oversteer for wheels and GX52 for hotas.
I don't have a TrackIR device but I've used FacetrackNoIR with the neuralnet face tracker and besides needing a bit of background lighting, it woked fine.
It's not all perfect and depending on the games, it might need some tinkering. For example Mechwarrior 5 refuses to work properly with my hotas, and when I had a weaker CPU, Beam.ng was unusable with traffic/opponents. Some older titles are a pain to set up, like the older WRC games that had some obscure config files for the mappings. The upside is that you can back up your "fake windows C:" (aka as compatdata folder) once you got everything the way you like it.
I mostly do office type stuff and vector graphics along with CNC, and the proprietary software I need runs 90% fine on wine/bottles, so I haven't had much of any blocker issues with work stuff.
I've been running Linux way before proton was a thing, and I'm really happy about how things are moving nowadays. I got used to the gnome workflow and now any other OS feels cumbersome and clunky, but YMMV.
TL; DR:
- PRO: most sim stuff just works
- CON: some games perform a bit worse
- PRO: most hardware runs OOTB and popular gear have apps for setup and options
- CON: those are unofficial and might not support all bells and whistles
- CON: some games are finnicky to set up, especially with external software addons (eg crewchief, ED companion, TrackIR)
- PRO: you can save your games prefix so all that work is portable/reproducible
- most office stuff is more than adequate for everyday work.
Unless the crook happens to be extremely nerdy or its law enforcement, already being a Linux formatted partition feels it should be enough for a rando breaking in and stealing a computer.
That being said, something like a PiKVM connected to your server (and Tailscale) could let you enable both UEFI/boot password and propt for LUKS decryption upon boot.
With a cassette to 3.5mm jack adapter and a discman on an anti-skip cradle, obviously
I tried grocy but it was too cumbersome for day to day usage. Ended up using Nextcloud:
- Created a set of calendars/todo lists and set them to shared. One for chores, another for appointments and last one for shopping list.
- JTX board app for android phones (also davx5 for syncing, but that was already installed on most for personal info sync and backups).
- Added those NC to my HomeAssistant and replaced the default shopping list with the NC ones.
- (optional) added some geofence zones on HA on regular shopping spots, and an automation that sends the shopping list as a notification to whoever is nearby.
Setup was a bit hit and miss until I figured stuff out but it's been working fine for us for the better part of a year now.
My case fans are listed and I can see the rpm, I just couldn't figure out the "create a curve based off the temp of this other sensor" part.
Does anybody know if it's possible to use this to control case fans based on sensor's temps other than the CPU ones? I've been fiddling with it for 10 minutes and can't figure it out.
I have an oversized CPU cooler and a pretty closed case (thermaltake view27). For now I'm brute forcing airflow with the 3 intake front fans but it gets loud even while idling.
Since the cooler is oversized, by default the case fans won't spin up faster even when my GPU is dumping tons of heat into the case. I'd like to set it so it takes the temps off a motherboard sensor rather than the cpu
I got a second hand note10+ just for that feature, only to find out they deprecated Linux on DeX D:

Funkwhale + Portainer?


Has anybody here managed to install Funkwhale using Portainer? I've already tried 3 times, first tried a template, but turns out the AIO container is deprecated, then tried modifying the default docker-compose and env files available on Funkwhale's repo, didn't work (couldn't run the required commands to create a user). Then I spun up a brand new debian 12 LXC container on proxmox, ran their quick install script and failed (something related to snapd, even though it was installed).
Up until now I've been an avid Navidrome user, but since we've been cutting some costs, Spotify had to go. Too late I realised Navidrome has no library separation: Even though you can have multiple us

Suggestions on SBC media player


I'm looking for a media player/OS for an ARM SBC that can stream from my navidrome (subsonic compatible) music server, and be controlled via either a web GUI or an android app. I'd love to hear what you guys came up with!
Currently really happy with my setup, I'm using Navidrome as my music server, along with Ultrasonic as my phone client.
I've set up a (dumb/analog) speaker system on my workshop, and I'd like to be able to listen to music there, but I don't want to add a whole setup (be it an old laptop, or add kb/mouse, monitor and such) and my phone no loner has a 3.5mm jack.
I have a Raspberry Pi 3, an OrangePi Zero, and an OrangePi PC+. I'd rather use the zero or the PC+ since they're kinda unstable/wonky and I don't trust them anymore for stuff I want to keep running 24/7 (like pihole).
I'm open to testing other music servers (volumio maybe?) on my main homelab if that means having the ability to change the client/sink from the app/gui (something like what Spotify does, wher

Add HTPC capabilities to home server
My server is a regular pc hidden away behind the tv console, it's running ubuntu server and most services run inside docker.
One of the most used services is Jellyfin. It works reliably on all PCs but it's a mess on my samsung tv running tizen. I enabled developer mode and built jellyfin app for it, but depending on the codec or size, it'll buffer or skip audio and its getting really annoying.
How would you go about adding a jellyfin frontend (jellyfin media player) on the server itself, since I could plug in a 2m HDMI cable for video output?
EDIT: I should probably explain a bit better. The server has a Ryzen 3 3200G with integrated graphics, so video output itself would be trivial (just plug an HDMI cable to the motherboard output). Right now if I plug it in, I get a TTY since it's a server distro not intended to have a GUI. My question was more along the lines of how to set up the lightest graphical session to run jellyfin media player (probably via flatpak so it's independent o