The installation of any media server will involve some command line/ text file setup. Once it is installed, you shouldn't have to do much if anything by command line.
Here is a demo of what is looks like once it's installed.
The installation of any media server will involve some command line/ text file setup. Once it is installed, you shouldn't have to do much if anything by command line.
Here is a demo of what is looks like once it's installed.
For me, Jellyfin was pretty easy to set up, but some of the software it connects with has given me trouble (Mostly the STARR stack, which locates content and organizes your library).
Right now I have Jellyfin set up as a docker container and it was very easy to setup. It works well for remote access with Tailscale.
I'm in the USA, but I think they sell Ring and other video doorbells and security cameras in other countries, including Europe.
The "extra steps" are exactly what concerns me.
Look, I know that a lot of people find valuable community and information from platforms like Bluesky, Threads, etc. They are worlds better than the Nazi Bar that used to be Twitter. But the repeated lie that they are a part of the fediverse or that they benefit the fediverse or an open internet is cynical and misleading.
We live in a world where Mastodon exists, and is actually pretty good even though there is a learning curve to it. If we are volunteering efforts to promote a microblogging platform, I personally don't think that it should be one backed by billionaires and built for profit. They have a budget for that. the Fediverse only has us. We are the marketing department.
I think it would be really interesting to see a Peertube instance (for example) create a paid tier with better quality uploads and analytics. Those cost money to maintain. The difference is that it would exist in a federated ecosystem where everyone would be able to benefit from that content.
Joke's on you, I'm into that.
Donation model would be completely viable if they actually allowed other people to run federated servers.
But it's been a VC Trojan horse from the start.
Gee whiz wow who could have possibly seen this coming.
But people have been assuring me that it is a federated protocol, so I guess I'll just join another instance. I'm sure there is a list somewhere.... It's coming... Any day now...
Also true. I use it in a business setting and it sort of doubles as a security camera. I would love to have the same functionality at home but it would have to be self hosted. Super creepy for a company to be watching my house
Having a Ring doorbell is a game changer. If you've never used one I understand the reticence.
I do think it will be standard thing in the future. It's a basic quality of life improvement having a record of door interactions, being able to answer when you are away, even answering without going to the door. It's easy to understand and appealing to most people.
It's the lowest entry point into smart homes.
Unfortunately, I don't think there is a mature enough FOSS video streaming platform. it turns out video hosting is really really expensive and complicated.
The login instructions are on the login screen. Anyway, I'm not really computer savvy but I've been able to get it working. Let me know if you want any tips to get started. I know that self hosting can be intimidating at the beginning.