Due to 10 years of being open, Tabula-rasa.pw opened registration for the next 96 hours
Supporter++—5k API Hits/5k Downloads; 1 year—$20⁄2 years—$38
Supporter—2k API Hits/2k Downloads; 1 year—$10⁄2 years—$19
Free—100 API Hits/10 Downloads; Free
New to usenet; wondering if everyone who is automating and downloading from usenet is just downloading a ton of ~linux isos~ constantly? Like… making your own personal labeled collection of isos? Or do you all use it more on an adhoc basis, like you are looking for a specific thing and go get it when you need it?
I’ve seen a flurry of new posts on Tabula Rasa in the past week or so with many incomplete articles (per my own client and also in the file details shown on TR’s site). None of these posts include any redundancy blocks, so they universally fail to download. I haven’t experienced this issue (especially lack of redundancy blocks!) on other trackers. Has anybody else noticed this, or is it just me?
Hey guys,
Just curious if anyone is aware of any ~80% off promo’s for usenetserver.com?
My yearly sub is expiring tomorrow, and the only promo’s i’ve been able to find kind of suck.
I’ve been using usenetserver since they first came around ~25 years now, so would prefer not to change providers.
Would be much appreciated if anyone has one and can share!
Thanks!
I’m aware of Newsdemon and I’m looking for alternatives.
I know Easynews used to be in the Phoenix area but they appear to have been migrated to the Omicron systems in Reston, VA at some point.
Are there any other providers that have servers that are Denver area or further West? I find that I don’t get nearly as good of speeds going all the way to the East coast, likely due to my ISP having some crappy routes going that direction.
Ideally I’d like something in the LA or SF Bay area, but I’m open to options.
Thanks!
Couple of those folks COULD be direct playing, but ive given up trying lol. Intel 13100.
I’ve been a Plex apologist for years. Until today.
I am currently embarking on a week long cruise in Alaska. Knowing that internet is going to be practically non-existent for the week, I prepared for entertaining my family by downloading a couple of TV seasons and movies for flights and evenings. Downloads all worked at high speed on my home Wifi with a really decent GPU in my Plex server, except for 3 episodes that stayed in a queued state no matter what I did. Fine.
We boarded the first flight of three, and I told myself, “Hey, you’ve got a few hours, watch a movie”. Hit play. “Source error” with no other information.
Other than 3 TV episodes, everything I’d downloaded reported Source Error. I’m on hotel WiFi right now. There’s noting wrong with those episodes, original quality or transcoded when played directly off my remote accessible server. This is the only night that will be an option.
Plex, fix this basic …
I thought I would just add my DVDs into a digital media library.
One month in and I’ve already bought three 4 TB drives, filled two of them and have a list of over a thousand things I want to get so I can put them all on there…
That was it I just wanted to rant for a moment about that to people who would understand.
Hey everyone
I’m running Plex Media Server on a Raspberry Pi 4 at home and want to access it remotely. I’ve read that instead of exposing the default port (32400), I could forward a random high external port (like 45789) to my Pi’s internal port 32400.
I don’t really know much about networking, and I’d like to avoid diving into things like Cloudflare Tunnels or Tailscale yet. I just want something simple that works, and this seems like the easiest option.
So my questions are:
Thanks in advance!
Hey r/Sonarr Team,
The newest version of Huntarr has been released with the following changes for tagged ARR’s. This will help you better filter your tags via your ARRs via your stack.
For Sonarr - We removed Episode mode to further reduce the API calls as Season Packs mode utilizes only 1 API call.
Release Info - https://github.com/plexguide/Huntarr.io
GITHUB: https://huntarr.io
HUNTARR
SONARR
Hey r/radarr
After a year with Radarr my library grew from about 800 carefully sorted movies to more than 4 600. Along the way I kept wishing there were an easy way to scoop up every film from a favorite actor director or writer without slogging through one title at a time. The built-in person monitor helps but clicking through every movie page still feels slow and messy.
So I put together Helparr. Drop in your free TMDB API key search a person and tick the roles you care about acting directing producing writing or sound. Helparr bundles the matching films into a personal RSS feed ready for Radarr. Copy that feed into your Radarr settings, choose how you want new items imported, and you are done. One feed per user keeps your lists clean.
The app lives on Vercel right now and it is very much a beta project. Everything stays local to Vercel Redis and your own browser. No tracking, no personally identifiable analytics, just your lists. Give it a spin and let me know what works what …
Hello everyone!
Almost a month ago I shared Pulsarr, and it’s been incredible watching it streamline media workflows across the community! From small family servers to larger setups, users are automating their entire request pipeline through Plex’s native watchlist.
For newcomers: Pulsarr bridges Plex watchlists with Sonarr and Radarr, enabling real-time media monitoring and automated content acquisition. Add something to your Plex watchlist (yours or friends’) → automatic download through your Arr stack → instant notification when it’s ready to watch. No separate request systems, no token juggling, everything happens within the Plex app itself.
The biggest wins from community feedback:
🔍 Tautulli Integration - Send notifications directly to users through Plex mobile apps
📺 Plex Session Monitoring - Auto-search for next seasons when users near season finales
🎯 Smart Content Routing - Route content based on genre, user, language, …
Almost a month ago, I posted about a project that I wanted to share with the community. Since then, I’ve made several major improvements, so I thought I’d provide an update!
MKVPriority assigns configurable priority scores to audio and subtitle tracks, similar to custom formats in Radarr/Sonarr. MKV flags, such as default and forced, are automatically set for the highest-priority tracks (e.g., 5.1 surround and ASS subtitles), while lower-priority tracks (e.g., stereo audio and PGS subtitles) are deprioritized. MKVPriority modifies track flags in place using mkvpropedit (no remuxing), allowing media players to automatically select the best audio and subtitle tracks according to your preferences.
OCDarr sits alongside Sonarr and automatically manages your episodes based on YOUR viewing activity and time-based rules. It’s like having a smart assistant that knows:
🎯 Flexible Rules Per Show:
🔄 Two-Layer System:
🎮 Use It Your Way: