How often is DS open for registration? Only have one good indexer and so far had no luck to get in. How do you keep an eye on the opening for registration?
Thank you guys for invites! Got in!
The v24.2 release of NZBGet introduces a new Status Page in settings. This page includes a new speed testing tool, supporting performance optimization, configuration assistance, and disk drive performance enhancements in future releases. The speed test feature provides a clear way to evaluate server connections and ensure the best download speeds. We have brought back Android with full support and several bugs have been fixed too.
Download NZBGet v24.2 Client Here
System Info Tab and Server Speed Tests (#303):
Android …
I am set up with three Usenet Providers spanning all different backbones, and five well regarded Indexers.
Despite this, I was still seeing failures sometimes and I was curious of the inner workings of Usenet and wanted to know why. In my research and asking around, it seems I missed out on the fact that even though all the indexers I’m using are private and well regarded, there is a further class of indexers beyond that.
Well I am not naming any indexers and ABSOLUTELY am not asking others to name them as that would be in bad form, I am hoping someone can help me understand the workings of this better.
The question being, the differences between some of the major indexers most folks know and the ones I currently have, that generate their nzb’s from “parsing out nzb headers” (I don’t completely understand the meanings of this), as opposed to those indexers that SOURCE their nzb’s.
Please help me understand.
If I wanted to make contributions to newsgroups, what are the most user-friendly tools available in 2024, especially in terms of handling encodings and large attachments?
I’m an amateur historian with an interest in newspaper comics, and have been paying attention to, through not necessarily participating in, the newsgroup rec.arts.comics.strips for a while now. From what I’ve been able to see, the group dates back to around 1992. I would love to be able to somehow download all the messages from the group and read them offline at my leisure, but I’m not sure how to do that.
I can find mbox archives at archive.org, but they only date back to the early 2000s. Narkive only goes back that far as well (though that site has no built in search function and is horrible for trying to browse to find anything older than about a month, so it’s not even a good option for online reading). Google Groups appears to have the whole thing, but none of the solutions for downloading messages seem to work anymore after it changed to using Javascript. There’s also UsenetArchives.com which goes all the way back, but I haven’t found a way to …
Everyone I’ve tried to share with doesn’t know how to set it up and I don’t feel like explaining so at this point, I’m using it just for FLAC music streaming. I see posts on here about sharing with friends and family but is it worth using Plex if it’s just for your own use?
It’s addictive.
Before you know it you have a NAS with four drives running sonarr, radarr, and bazarr. Two weeks earlier you had no idea what those were.
Well this has been a long time coming, but looks like plug-ins and agents are officially dying soon.
Hey all, I know this isn’t specifically Sonarr related but it’s something I’ve been wondering for a while.
I’ve been using usenet for well over a decade, I’ve noticed a lot of people seem to be using Sonarr with torrents and I can’t see a reason why you would use torrents over usenet? Aside from maybe very small and unpopular pieces of content?
Hi, I’m not tech smart so don’t bully, sonarr works perfectly fine on my Laptop, but my question is, when I’m away from home and I want to log into sonarr and download a show, how can I do that? I heard people say VPN or proxy etc, but is there a simpler way without needing vpn etc and I’m not smart so doing that will give me a headache, I really don’t care if someone gets “acesss to my sonarr” i don’t have much on it if you get me, so is there any way? Would be amazing if there is. Cheers.
So i’ve set up my sonarr instance via prowlarr with seeding goals of a ratio of 2 or seeding time one year for all indexers. While seeding sonarr is set up to use hardlinks.
What I’d like to know is what sonarr does once the goal is reached? Does it keep the hardlinks or does it move the file to my media folder?
Thanks in advance, I tried to find an answer here and in the wiki but did not find a definitive answer.
Sonarr has two “Upgrade Until” criteria, both of which say, “Once this [quality/CF] is reached, Sonarr will no longer grab episodes.”
Will Sonarr upgrade until both are met? Just one or the other?
In other words, if a release meets my “Upgrade Until CF Score” value, but hasn’t met my “Upgrade Until [Quality]” value, will it continue to upgrade if a higher quality comes along?
Please allow me some latitude as I saw another posting asking a similar question a while back. Mine is simpler. I run Windows (10 I think) at home and my goal is to automate the “arrs” as part of my set up with Plex…at least Sonarr and Radarr (if I can get that far). Is my first step to load Virtual Box, then load Ubuntu, to then finally have a chance at loading something like sonarr (and its mates)? And then, you can throw in a Docker container (whatever the hell that is) for a little cherry on top. I have read the guides and watched as many YT vids as I can find that include instructions for these programs and for me…the more I watch the more confused and discouraged I get. The question is where do I start? And do I just say the hell with it, and jump in? I am 64 yo and am pretty much self taught at anything involving tech. Just looking for an assist - not somebody to hold my hand at every step.
I would have gone to a Linux/Ubuntu sub, but I doubt …