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piracy is the correct and moral thing to do here
if they dont give a fuck they dont have the moral highground to guilt tripping us into stopping it
piracy is the correct and moral thing to do here
if they dont give a fuck they dont have the moral highground to guilt tripping us into stopping it
we gotta step our game the fuck up then.
stremio
this just makes me wanna install bare-metal goody-2-shoes windows and cheat using a 5$ arduino
nah teach a man how to fish!
til this exists, awesome!
in addition to servarr, which was already mentioned, you can use Stremio. its similar to popcorntime and a lot simpler than setting up and maintaining servarr.
an RPi’s processing power can handle your use case as long as packages are available for its architecture, it shouldnt be a problem on common usecases.
you can use it to stream games from another machine using sunshine/moonlight too.
is there a way to play partially downloaded files on jellyfin?
firefox? if so update your ublock lists and refresh the tab.
works fine, like on windows.
make sure to upload it if you ever succeed
VM with gpu rendering enabled (good emulation driver or passthrough), not enough for the best performance, but you can use software like fswatch (linux only, but windows certainly has something like it too) to see if the game will change anything on your system that it shouldnt.
the best course of action for games is finding a realiably safe source for them so you don’t have to do this every single time.
cant stress this enough. read the tos on most antiviruses, they are free for a reason.
if you are on windows, use defender, its built in and enabled by default, so no need to worry.
use virustotal to scan files you download, and run it in a vm first if you still think it might be malicious.
wireguard and dynamicdns
i dunno is it? how to set that up?
there actually is one platform for all the media.
its called 1337x
yes
is it though? what makes it trustworthy?
why did it fail?
a simple cron job pointing to an update.sh with an apt update && apt upgrade -y does the trick.
i wouldnt recommend you to completely automate it though
debian has unattended-updates by default and generally takes care of itself