I like to use FileBrowser simply because it has a good UI as well as a built-in share feature. So it doubles as the file browser I use for my server and for sharing any files with my friends
I used to be someone who used to watch movies and tv shows on soap2day/fmovies/etc but once I tried watching a proper full release (Bluray encode, or even just a WEB release) I could never go back. If you have a good TV, and you want to maximise your watching experience, private trackers are easily the way to go. But it entirely depends on your needs.
Even with a slower upload speed, it’s not impossible to keep a good ratio. As long as you have drive space to seed, you will get bonus points that you can use to keep your ratio positive. About being kicked, most sites are “one lifetime, one account” so you can’t just restart from RED if you get in trouble. Ideally, don’t get in trouble, stay off the forums except for recruitments, just keep a good ratio and don’t fuck up.
For Movies and TV you generally don’t need to care where you get it from. Even if the file is infected somehow, a competent video player will not allow whatever malicious code to be executed so you’re good there
What you do need to worry about is for Games and Software. You are essentially running random .exe files that would even show up as a malicious file on VirusTotal if it’s a cracked program that bypasses some subscription or premium purchase.
You said you don’t download much games and when you do it’s Fitgirl so you’re good there. Fitgirl is a trusted releaser and as long as you use fitgirl-repacks.site you won’t have an issue (double check the hashes anyway, fitgirl releases include a program that does it for you). It is true 1337x had that problem recently with the EMPRESS release for Baldur’s Gate 3 that included a Bitcoin miner (apparently EMPRESS was not responsible for it, and someone else had reposted it including the malware).
If you do download games, the best tracker is GazelleGamesNetwork (GGn) and you should consider finding a way in if you want to play more games at some point. Releases there are thoroughly checked and the staff are very careful. People find out very quickly if something is questionable and will not hesitate to call it out so it can be considered safe.
As for software, it’s tough because there is no big trusted private tracker for cracked programs for Windows. Rutracker is what I usually recommend, it’s semi-private and is atleast better than 1337x or TPB (try not to use those anymore). RuTracker also has m0nkrus releases, just translate the comments and see if anything seems off about it.
Apparently it looks like, atleast on Ultra.cc, you can add your own reverse proxy configs to .apps/nginx/proxy.d and once you restart the nginx service if will proxy your requests. It’s just up to you to configure it properly although Support won’t help you with that. I imagine the other providers also have something similar although it may not be as straightforward
Yeah, the reverse proxy thing is kind of annoying. It seems for the most part, you’d just need to access them through http://IP:PORT
which I understand you’d probably not want to do. Haven’t really found a way around that but Ultra.cc supports Overseerr natively
HostingBy seems to have really good price, but I have heard that their support is lacking and if you want answers you’re better off asking in the discord for someone else to help you out.
Ultra recently introduced a Singapore option for some of their plans which I would definitely recommend if you’re located in Asia and you’re getting it as a media server. They also let you install pyenv (for Python versions), nodejs and golang so it’s easier for you to install your own apps. There are a lot of ways to compile your own apps, it just takes a bit of learning and time
It’s been proven over and over again that Microsoft simply does not care for individual consumers anymore. I mean, you can use any Microsoft Windows installation without activating for perpetuity and the only issue would be no customisation of the wallpaper and that pesky notice on the bottom right.
The money from Enterprise is enough to justify it
I believe what you’re looking for is Remote Path Mapping, read this guide and see if it fits your situation - https://trash-guides.info/Radarr/Radarr-remote-path-mapping/
Sonarr should be the same setup process. Essentially, you want your arr’s to be able to see and access the files on your seedbox. Best way that I’ve found to do this is sshfs
or rclone’s sftp
. Mount your seedbox’s download folder on your Plex server with sshfs/sftp
Since you’re also moving the files from your seedbox to your Plex server with synching, I imagine a setup involving mergerfs
will work too. Basically, you mount your seedbox download folder to your Plex server, use mergerfs to merge it with your local Plex server’s location that Sonarr/Radarr imports it to - point Sonarr, Radarr and the Plex to the merged location. When the files are being moved by Syncthing, all your services will still think they’re in the same location so it doesn’t get confused.
If you want to go that route, you can use the Google Drive guide - https://web.archive.org/web/20220508210909/https://wikiold.servarr.com/Cloud_Setup and change it a bit so it works for your configuration. Ignore the parts about encrypting and the nightly move script, Syncthing does that for you. And instead of mounting a Google drive remote, you will be mounting your seedbox through sshfs/sftp
Don’t think about the speeds advertised by providers, you’ll never come close to them. You seem to require a media server, so give more importance to storage.
From my research comparing HostingBy, SeedHost and Ultra.cc - HostingBy has the highest €/TB rate except for the 1TB box which is ironically the highest €/TB rate
Here’s the Google Sheet if you’re interested Ignore the remarks and INR part, I’m Indian so wanted to see what I would end up paying
I will add on more providers at some point, but these 3 are the big names with decent prices and support.
As for your other problem of app selection, I don’t think you’ll find any of those in most providers natively (except for Transmission). You can request them, but its not a quick process. Instead of that, try installing them yourself. Even without root, it shouldn’t be impossible, the only thing that may be annoying is you may not be able to setup reverse proxy so you’ll need to access those services with http://ip:port
For the most parts, movies and tv shows is generally safe. It’s really difficult to do anything from a media file (.mkv/.mp4) and as long as the torrent doesn’t contain any other weird files you’re fine.
It’s with software and games that you really need to be careful. For software, I would recommend m0nkrus releases from rutracker.org . Google translate the comments on any release and you will see whether any release is suspicious.
Games on the other hand is very hard. There are a bunch of really popular sites that will include some sort of crypto software and other questionable stuff along with their games (igg-games comes to mind). The only public space I trust to get games from is fitgirl-repack.site (this domain is the only official one). Other than that, I only trust GazelleGames but you have to find a way into that and I’m not gonna say it’s hard but its definitely a bit of effort to join.
Like I said before it’s about control. A lot of us want to be able to control what we want to watch, the specific release groups and source of the content we watch. I’m not saying it’s necessarily better than what you do. You have a 128tb media server and you’re obviously a lot more invested into this whole thing than I am but I prefer to control my content.
What indexers do you have added to sonarr/radarr? dbzer0 doesn’t mind naming them afaik so you’re good to share them here
Setting the quality slider as the other user suggested should work. Go to Settings->Quality and slide the size for WEBDL-1080P and BLURAY-1080P to the size you’d prefer (remember that it’s defined as size per hour and not total size of the file)
The best way to do this imo is to define release profiles based on groups. I’m guessing, based on your size preferences, you’d normally grab H265/HEVC 1080p releases re-encoded by various groups like TGx and PSA
On Sonarr (v3), create a release profile and name it whatever you want. In the Must Contain field, paste this -
/^(?=.*(1080|720))(?=.*((x|h)[ ._-]?265|hevc)).*/i
This will force Sonarr to only grab releases which are HEVC. This is actually supposed to go in the Must Not Contain field because re-encodes are much more inferior. But if your intention is to save space this works.
Then in the preferred section you can define the rankings for certain groups you’d like to see. So type in -PSA
on the first one and give it a score of 100. In the next one type -TGx
with a score of 95 and so on with the groups you’d like to see with corresponding scores according to your preferences.
Radarr is on v4 and now uses Custom Formats so read https://trash-guides.info/Radarr/ to get a better understanding. The Sonarr section can also help if you want to be more specific with your filters. Anyway, Custom Formats can be imported pretty easily but its best you go through that yourself and try to recreate the profile we made on Sonarr for Radarr
Sonarr only downloads media according to the the rules you give it. If you don’t give it any rules, it will just grab whatever immediately matches the quality profile (1080p, 2160p, etc)
What you can do is follow the trash-guides. Those will give you an updated list of decent groups, and if you use them with notifiarr/recylarr, the profiles on sonarr/radarr will also auto-update along with changes in the guides
I believe you’re referring to ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3 2023 2160p WEB-DL DDP5 1 Atmos HDR DV HEVC-CMRG’
The HDR DV part of the title denotes that the file is “High Dynamic Range + Dolby Vision”. The reason you’re seeing the pink, or sometimes green, filter is because of the Dolby Vision HDR layer on this file.
This file is sourced from Disney+ and if you had a DV supported display, they would serve this version of the file for you. Otherwise, they would serve a SDR, or Standard Dynamic Range, version of the same movie for displays that don’t support DV or has it disabled. I recommend that if you’re grabbing 2160p files, you take care to see whether you’re grabbing a HDR version.
In your case, I would almost always go with non-HDR and non-DV, sometimes it could be both, sometimes it could be either one. Ideally, grab a release that doesn’t included both of those terms and you should have the SDR version. 1080p can also have HDR, but very rarely DV so you only really need to care about this when it’s 4k
If I’m being honest, I can see myself switching pretty quickly. I’m still pretty new to all this Fediverse stuff and changes happen all the time.
The main thing that irks me about Lemmy right now is the UI and the latency. I’ve used Jerboa, and now I’m using Liftoff and I’m really not a fan of the UI. I was a Boost for Reddit user, so if Boost was somehow reworked for Lemmy, I’d be more than happy to use it (I’m not trying to demand this, just saying that’s what I’d like to see in apps).
The other issue is latency. The dbzer0 instance is already pretty damn slow for me, but even lemmy.world takes so long for loading comments and posting is the most annoying.
You would still need a server to host your Plex. Usenet is just the source of your files. You would use a downloader like SABnzbd to download and unpack your files. You can then point Plex to those files if you wanna access them on your Plex.
The only thing that changes when you switch from torrent to usenet is how the files are downloaded. The same way you can torrent at home, you can also download from usenet at home. It’s just that if you have a server, you can offload all the downloading and unpacking to the server, and you can also use Plex to share it with your friends, etc.
Just a heads up that you probably shouldn’t install games/software from usenet. Pretty much anyone can upload anything they want to an indexer, and it’s usually the same thing that gets mirrored to other indexers as well. For movies/tv this generally doesn’t end up to be a problem but for anything you execute it could be dangerous
For software I recommend you sign up to m0nkrus and for games you can either be safe with fitgirl-repacks.site or find a way into GazelleGames
I guess this will vary across clients but I’ve used Voyager (formerly known as wefwef) till Boost for Lemmy came out. It’s funny because, on Voyager I would love that this bot exists cus the normal https hyperlinks wouldn’t work directly on Voyager, it would just open up an external browser tab and only the link posted by the bot would open in the app itself
Meanwhile on Boost for Lemmy, the normal https links work just fine, directly pointing to the community in the app itself, but the one posted by the bot doesn’t work at all (it’s not even hyperlinked)