HGST does trend towards being a winner, and now with the largest Western Digital drives. But you definitely should pay attention to specific models like you said.
HGST does trend towards being a winner, and now with the largest Western Digital drives. But you definitely should pay attention to specific models like you said.
I don’t have the space to hoard garbage.
Readarr and MaM.
We’re talking about data storage, not software. There are real every day costs, maintenance, replacement, power, etc… that are involved in reliably storing data.
I share the sentiment that you should be able to buy software.
Paying for data storage in a single lifetime payment is like buying one square foot of storage space in someone’s apartment for a flat fee and expecting it to actually be there forever.
Fireproof safes don’t protect against heat except what’s high enough to combust paper. Temps will still probably be high enough to destroy a drive with a regular fireproof safe.
Never trust a company selling lifetime accounts. It’s entirely unsustainable and eventually the other shoe always drops.
I had almost given up hope that someone would make a Subsonic compatible app that doesn’t suck. Dsub was the only really functional one and it’s quite dated.
So it’s sub containers?
This is all in one container? That is the exact wrong way to use docker.
Yeah, it seems like the latter option is the obvious answer. It’s an awful lot of work you still have to pay for. I’d rather just pay someone to offer me secure email and not harvest my information.
Thanks for confirming. So pay for a vps to run this on, or just pay an email provider.
Very interested in this as Gmail is one of my last Google cords to cut. But it doesn’t solve the issue of trying to host it from a non-commercial Internet connection. Last I remember most ISPs won’t let you open the ports required to run an email service on a home connection. Anyone have modern experience with that?
You can get them on eBay and Amazon for that much.
A refurbished elite desk sff PC works great.
Updating software that’s in such early development without reading the release notes is foolish.
Apple sabotages your user experience at every turn unless you use their solutions which cost money and your response is to stop using other software. Sounds like the desired outcome for Apple.
Do not have docker containers auto update.
Dear God yes. It makes life a lot easier. It’s very easy to use and understand.
I have a feeling that once you’ve used it you’ll be kicking yourself for not doing so sooner.
There’s no better solution to a problem than, “your problem is wrong.”
The other person is wrong. Your Usenet indexers will work on prowlarr. The most important feature that Prowlarr has that gets overlooked is that it will sync your indexers into the other arr programs like radarr sonarr, lidarr, etc… automatically. You make a change on prowlarr it syncs to them all. It’s the ideal solution for managing indexers all in one place.