Wrrzag

joined 1 year ago
[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 month ago

Thomas Sankara and Rosa Luxemburg

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 months ago

I'm a commie, so I'm all for social ownership of the means of production, but that's neither here nor there. The point is, there isn't a scale of how pure capitalism is: a Keynesian model is as capitalistic as laissez-faire is because the underlying relationships to capital are the same. Communism isn't at the other end of any scale because it's an entirely different model, not just more or less regulation.

Some may argue that no country is socialist because they are still transitioning, and that they are still capitalist, but that's not a scale: they are not socialist (yet, hopefully) because their mode of production is still capitalistic.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 6 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Regulated capitalism is still capitalism. There's no such thing as "pure" or "impure" capitalism, the social relationships to capital are the same. Lassiez-faire capitalism is just a flavour of it.

It's like ice-cream: you may prefer chocolate ice-cream over vanilla ice-cream, but they are both flavours of ice-cream and you wouldn't say "yea, that's not pure ice-cream". Some people may even dislike ice-cream altogether and prefer cheesecake.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 43 points 9 months ago (5 children)
  • If you want to torrent files, you need to subscribe to an exclusive private tracker. To get access to a private tracker, you need to get lucky, or you need to go through a painstaking process of levelling up over months and months of seeding torrents from semi-private trackers until you get to an actual good one that may or may not have the content you are looking for.

Uh, no. Tpb, rutracker, nyaa... Work well. If you want more curated stuff then yes, private trackers might be worth it, but you can still find a ton of things on public trackers.

  • Whether you are using torrents or UseNet, you need a service to help you find the content in the first place, for example Sonarr, Radarr or Lidarr. Something called Jackett also fits into this somehow and apparently links to whatever indexes you are using.

No. You can just search in one of the trackers and add the torrent to your download client.

  • If you are torrenting, you then need a torrent client such as qBitTorrent to actually get the files.

Yes, obviously. If you want to ddl you'll likely need a web browser, too.

I just wanna have my own home streaming service.

If you don want to automate it then just search for stuff manually and move your downloaded media to your library folders like it has been done since forever.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 5 points 10 months ago

I didn't really like readarr, it had a weird workflow and I find books to be different than series (they have longer release frequency, for example) so I'm getting them manually and importing into calibre for metadata. This way I can also check the quality of each epub because I hate finding that the book I'm going to read is badly formatted or has a weird encoding.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 months ago

They did that in the LOTR Journeys in Middle-Earth game and in the new editions of Descent. The scenarios, spawns and enemy movement are all managed by the app, which is fine, but they don't have an alternative way to play without it, which is crappy. But I'm sure that if they stop support someone will reverse engineer it and make a ruleset to admin these things.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 months ago

Yeah, sounds good. My proxmox is installed in a couple of raid0 SSD for redundancy and the VMs are in a 1tb nvme. All the remaining data (media, files, Arma/other game mods, backups...) is stored in spinning HDDs. I'm using an Intel CPU so I didn't bother with a dedicated GPU and it's working without a problem, but I still have to stress test jellyfin when transcoding multiple streams.

If I was to do it again I'd downgrade to ddr4 and get much more RAM though, 32gb it's not that much when factoring in truenas, VMs and a couple of gameservers.

[–] Wrrzag@lemmy.ml 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

I went the DIY route a month and a half ago and it's been great. I opted for a larger case so I could add a bunch of HDDs and not be limited to the 2 or 4 that's the standard in a syno, and I'll keep adding more over time. I got carried away with the CPU and went with ddr5 so it's been quite more expensive than it should have been and it cost about 700 euro without the spinning disks, but it's been great with proxmox + a truenas VM (plus a bunch of extra vms for the arrs, tinkering, media servers, web stuff, pihole, nginx, some game servers...)