• @alchemist2023
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    5018 days ago

    jellyfin with sonarr and radarr and now jellyseerr make the whole process simple. usenet and nzb are the way now i just wait 10 min to get the film/series i want and then watch it. a minor delay I’m more than happy with. I’d be happy to pay if, and it’s a big if, the studios can catalogue all their shows in one place. i can watch without adverts. i can pay per episode if i want. I’d rather pay 50c an episode than pay for the whole service. let me curate what I want to watch on my terms. until then, the high seas win every time

    • @lepinkainen
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      1318 days ago

      The fact that nzbs are old as fuck and not one service has been taken down is weird.

      They bust torrent sites every day and they don’t even host anything.

      News hosters have literally petabytes of warez and nothing.

      And don’t get me started with real-debrid

      • DunkinCoder
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        318 days ago

        It comes down to where the copyright material is stored. The actual media hosted by torrent users is by the users and as we know over the last 15 years, that backfired entirely. So the easiest way is to take down the tracker.

        The files for NZBs are hosted on newsgroups and while obfuscated, is much easier to automate DCMA notices to. Also, the good NZB sites (like private trackers), are tightly controlled so their files are rarely hit vs a lot of ones who have open signups.

    • @Machinist
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      318 days ago

      Yo-ho-ho. The wife and kids love the pirate life as well. They just search what they want on Radarr or Sonarr and it pops up on Jellyfin in a few minutes. We were spending around $200/no on services with a lot less choice and lower quality.

        • @gmgmgm
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          4
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          17 days ago

          Best guide for it is by TRaSH.

          Equipment-wise, you’ll want:

          • Lots of HDD storage. A 1080p movie is about 10GB so if you have an idea of how many movies/shows you want you can figure that out, but once you start I guarantee you’ll keep going so be sure you give yourself more room!

          • A device in your network connected to your router and is on 24/7 — I use a Synology NAS, but you could use a Rasperry Pi or a PC that you leave on. It’s much easier if it can run Docker!

          You can start with torrenting if you want it to be 100% free, then if you like how it’s going and want much faster downloads and better availability you can dip into Usenet — I spend under $100 on an indexer and provider.

          The most basic setup uses:

          • qBittorrent as the torrent downloader
          • Radarr as the movie manager
          • Sonarr as the TV show manager
          • Prowlarr as the indexer manager
          • Plex as the media server

          Depending on how much you like tinkering with stuff, you can get into Usenet downloaders like sabnzb, requesting services like Overseer, notification services like Notifiarr… and more.

          The easiest way to get going is with Docker and using docker-compose files when they’re provided in documentation.

        • @Machinist
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          317 days ago

          I did it with a raspberry pi 4 and direct installs. If I had it to do over again, I would have a more powerful small server and use docker inages. There are a lot of docker guides out there but I don’t have experience with it yet.

          I had to do a bunch of complicated stuff like mounting my remote storage and such. I’ve been playing with Linux a long time. If you’re not experienced with Linux, I’d do docker.

          You start getting setup with Usenet, gimme a holler and I’ll send you a drunken slug invite. It’s the best indexer I’ve found, and I think I’ve let all my other indexers lapse.

          Do a bunch of reading before you start, before you purchase anything.