Aye.
Aye.
#😀
You mean the latest masterpiece of fantasy storytelling from Lucasfilms™ Brian Moriarty™? Why it’s an extraordinary adventure with an interface of magic, stunning high-resolution, 3D landscapes, sophisticated score and musical effects. Not to mention the detailed animation and special effects, elegant point ‘n’ click control of characters, objects, and magic spells.
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Aye.
Aye.
Just off the trail about here: https://maps.app.goo.gl/YAwoe6NLUCstuns87
does it support white listing things?
Actually, yes! I got a really good suggestion on this and it now supports a whitelist of TMDB/TVDB IDs in a file called protected
which you can volume mount when you call the container:
docker run --rm -it --env-file .env --network=host -v /home/user/protected:/app/protected ghcr.io/ask-me-about-loom/purgeomatic:latest python delete.movies.unwatched.py
It does not. My suggestion is to either set your threshold high enough that the content gets watched, or put it in a separate library of special content you don’t want deleted.
Nope! You pay for usenet aggregators who are archiving literally everything posted.
I recommend a private, paid indexer simply because there tends to better results from them.
Nothing dark web about it. Just old school.
One of the benefits of downloading from usenet is that no VPN is required: all of your content to/from your usenet provider can be encrypted and you’re never uploading content, like a torrent.
Look online and find yourself:
a usenet NZB indexer (pay for this service. Not free)
a usenet provider. Get a monthly subscription. They’re reasonably-priced. Tons of reviews out there, just search.
After you have both of those, you install sonarr (for TV shows), radarr (for movies), and sabnzbd+ (for doing the download). You connect your indexer account to sonarr/radarr and your usenet account to sabnzbd. Then, for example, you search for a movie on your radarr installation: radarr sends a query to your NZB indexer, which finds a result and returns it to radarr; that result is then forwarded to sabnzbd from radarr; sabnzbd connects to your usenet account and downloads the requested content. Presto!
How are you currently searching & downloading content?
In my specific case, I’m subscribed to a usenet indexing service, which is hooked in to sonarr & radarr, which send downloads to sabnzbd+ to trigger the downloads. Overseerr just adds another layer, sending requests to sonarr/radarr.
That said, Overseerr will work with pretty much whatever your specific method is. Just hook it in and the services handle the rest.
You would just be another Overseerr user. At initial setup, you pull all of the users you’ve shared your Plex server into the Overseerr config. You can dig into the settings and tweak it - the number of movies a default user can request per day, number of seasons of TV, etc. I have mine set up to auto-approve all requests, but users can only request one season of TV and three movies per day, to avoid people abusing the service. In general I don’t have to touch it.
If you want it accessible outside of your LAN, then yes, you’ll need a domain or tailscale/a VPN of some kind. But that’s true of any service.
I have some pretty heavy security on my config, but I expose the Overseerr container directly and just let the Plex auth do its thing. It doesn’t have write access to anything important anyway.
You’ve been recommended Ombi, but I recommend Overseerr instead. You can set it to permit them to only login using Plex auth (so no credentials for you to manage) and import your user list from Plex. It links up to radar or sonarr (and other stuff) for downloads. It can be configured to auto-approve downloads so you don’t have to do anything.
I’ve been using it for years now. It’s great.
I dunno. You’d think the same thing about Rage Against the Machine, yet here we are.
Upgrade your Plex box, but keep that Nvidia shield! It’s still one of the best Plex clients on the market and will direct play almost anything.
You could probably get by with something cheaper for your replacement. I found a local guy on craigslist selling these and got one with 32GB of ram and a 128GB m.2 for $175.
Haha, what? That’s, uh … that’s ridiculous.