I’m relatively new to this, but have loved collecting more and more movies and shows to my Plex library. It’s so satisfying watching the library grow, completing movie collections, and finding the perfect posters for all of them.
It’s so fun.
I am a lifetime pass holder. I would convert to monthly if you guys just focused on the product. Take my lifetime pass from me, please keep on the straight and narrow. Get rid of the exponential VC bullshit. We don’t want streaming. People are here because they are passionate. There are much much bigger companies fucking everyone over, you have been a rock. Let the community spend a “coffee” a month to make this product stay premium.
Signed,
Person with a home server.
VC == Venture captial
i recently made a switch from windows to Pop! OS and first thing i wanted to install was Plex Media Player to watch a newly added content, but was surprised to see nothing for linux. Took me a while to gulp the truth down but man it is really strange move from plex
Update: was able to install PMP using appImage. But still no official client is boiling my head.
--Reposted from UsenetExpress Blog–
Soon after starting UsenetExpress we were asked if we could implement the ability for end users to post old(er) articles that were not on our new spools. The original poster of the articles wanted to “repost” them using the same message-ids so that they didn’t take up twice the space on providers that already had the articles from the original post. Since the POST NNTP command limits how old the Date: header can be it wouldn’t allow them to post with the original headers. After mulling over possible solutions we decided to implement IHAVE at the end user level.
IHAVE has historically been used by usenet backbones to exchange articles. As the usenet feed volume grew over the years it has mostly been replaced with CHECK/TAKETHIS. Repurposing IHAVE seemed like an elegant solution that has been working well for a few years. It was recently brought to our attention that we never publicly announced the feature. A news reader/client developer …
I decided I would research the differences between DMCA and NTD providers. This ended up being a lot more work than I assumed it would be. So far I have been using Eweka and Newshosting.
Removals: The first thing I have nailed down is that Eweka removes articles between 5-7 days while Newshosting removes articles in less than a day. This isn’t as easy to verify since I do not have access to a list of DMCA or NTD notices. If one of the providers would be willing to publish take down requests similar to how Google publishes their take down requests, I could get a more accurate picture.
Retention and Completion: My methodology was to download ten nzbs randomly (less than 1000 days old) from each of five different categories per indexer. This gives fifty total nzbs that are randomly selected (less than 1000 days old) from each indexer. I then followed the same procedure and selected random nzbs but looked only for nzbs older than 1000 days. I now have 100 total nzbs from …
SALE EXTENDED FROM LAST WEEKEND!
Hello, please enjoy a weekend block sale on us!
1TB Block for only $12.00 use code: FlashBlock
Order: https://usenetfire.com/signup/5 or visit our plans page https://usenetfire.com/plans
The Low Down:
OVH is the company which hosts many servers for indexers etc. and they seem to be having issues this morning throwing lot’s of indexers offline.
Just so you know.
[EDIT] Apparently they are/were doing routine maintenance this morning and they fucked up :-)
Anyone know how to get support from Newshosting?
I tried to submit a ticket, but the system appears to be broken, since it doesn’t do anywhere and the form does appear to actually submit, it just recycles back to the same page.
They don’t seem to have any other contact methods that I can find. I have a billing issue that I’d like them to address. It seems that they have billed me too much for the account I just signed up for, and I’d like to get it resolved with them directly before I have to get my credit card company involved.
EDIT/Solution: Disable ABP, or contact directly via email at billing@newshosting.com
We are aware of issues adding movies and importing movies.
This is typically seen as
Request Failed. POST /api/v3/movie/import: HTTP request failed: [500:InternalServerError] [GET] at [https://radarrapi.servarr.com/v1/movie/436969] NzbDrone.Common.Http.HttpException: HTTP request failed: [500:InternalServerError] [GET] at [https://radarrapi.servarr.com/v1/movie/436969]at
Rest assured it is being looked into.
Update: The cause > TMDB made an API booboo and changed the date format they return for release dates
Reported to TMDB earlier by the Ombi Dev https://www.themoviedb.org/talk/616888d7d7f465005fa04bae
Edit/ Update 2030 UTC-5 2021-10-14
The meta server has been cut over to cache only to mitigate the bleeding. This will result in some movies being N/A.
TMDB is looking into the issue and believe they have resolved it. It will take at least 8 hours for the issue to be fully resolved.
I’m fairly new to this, but my PC has been my media hub. I recently discovered Radarr/Sonarr and I feel like most people are running it through docker, however I know many people have a NAS or dedicated machine/server.
Are there any cons to me just running radarr through the desktop/browsers on Windows?
I am getting a lot of duplicate downloads because of Radarr detecting 7.1 movies as 5.1 and causing an upgrade loop re-downloading multiple times.
Do you enable Sonarr to monitor and automatically download repacks & propers to replace existing downloads?
Maybe it’s me, but I’ve never actually noticed the difference until I was told a repack or proper fixed something. My media server is hosted on a Rasp Pi so I’m always attempting to optimize for efficiency to save constrained system resources. In addition to not over taxing my indexers.
More of a philosophical question rather than technical. Curious of your thoughts and opinions?