Especially since many Linux related organizations like SUSE and KDE are based in the EU.
Especially since many Linux related organizations like SUSE and KDE are based in the EU.
Do you use a USB bluetooth adapter? If so, try to use a very short USB A to USB A cable, it gets rid of most 2.4 GHz interference.
I see you still had the bug where OBS would spam “&” in every title.
Yep. Kodi slows down significantly if you have a large library and play through the addon. Native paths fixed that issue by playing directly from a network share instead.
Probably a bad time to suggest the Jellyfin for Kodi plugin (since they removed the network paths in this version) but it’s what I use for my main playback device.
All the goodies of playback via Kodi but play state and metadata gets synced from Jellyfin.
Another option of course would be to open the file(s) in MKVToolNix to add and correct the subtitle offset there.
Didn’t watch the video so not sure if it was referenced but there’s also the very interesting CCC talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XrlrbfGZo2k
Take a look at the Finamp desktop client. It comes very close to the Plexamp client from back when I was using Plex.
Not saying what they are doing is right, but Github issues are not a forum.
There’s a dozen people in there adding absolutely nothing to the issue, I would have locked it as well.
Kodi/LibreELEC is able to do all of it, but IMO it’s not a good experience for browsing YouTube
You can do the browsing on your phone and then share the link with your media center through Kore/Yatse and it will play it automatically.
SMB works on all operating systems, my server runs on Linux and Kodi also runs on Linux. (NFS is also supported)
Do you use the plugin mode (access via HTTP) or the direct mode (access directly via SMB)?
Music libraries are a mess in plugin mode.
Still not the best UI in the world but it’s the only Jellyfin player I found that can do seamless refresh rate switching, HDR playback, audio passthrough and has no issues with high bitrate 4k60 hardware decoding.
Kodi with the Jellyfin plugin also works really well. With LibreELEC or CoreELEC it can also be installed as a locked down kiosk client.
The common Logitech steering wheels should work if you have the steam-devices package installed on your system. Alternatively you can get the necessary udev rules from the oversteer repo: https://github.com/berarma/oversteer/tree/master/data/udev
(oversteer is also pretty handy)
I’m on holiday right now but I can get back to you on how to get Assetto Corsa with Content Manager to work.
Do you mean for downloading or for streaming? I use the normal Tidal app which already does the highest quality. Not the best app in the world but it does the job and I mostly listen to downloaded music anyway.
I know you said no service change but I use this Tidal client which works really well and goes up to 24-bit 192 kHz: https://github.com/Mastermindzh/tidal-hifi
I also download FLACs from Tidal, Deezer or Qobuz. You can find downloaders for them very easily.
I have exactly the setup you described, a Raspberry Pi with an 8 TB SSD parked at a friend of mine. It connects to my network via Wireguard automatically and just sits there until one of my hosts running Duplicati starts to sync the encrypted backups to it.
Has been running for 2 years now with no issues.
Same here, VRR and HDR support on Wayland were the main reason I switched to KDE.
(I also quite enjoy not having to install any extensions now.)