I used to rely heavily on duckdns and it was great for a time, but moved off them a couple of years ago because resolution became inconsistent. I’ve since rolled my own ddns using a script that utilizes Porkbun.com’s DNS record API.
I used to rely heavily on duckdns and it was great for a time, but moved off them a couple of years ago because resolution became inconsistent. I’ve since rolled my own ddns using a script that utilizes Porkbun.com’s DNS record API.
I can agree that challenging Steam is probably a good thing, but right now Steam just gives so much more value to Devs and publishers. Steam provides:
and that’s just what I can think of, not including the player specific stuff like library sharing.
Devs and publishers pay more, but get a community and ecosystem in return instead of just a platform.
Elden Ring with the Seamless Co-op mod. It’s not difficult or complicated to set up and it works extremely well
Not to be confused with white-label products in general
Was your old setup using docker volumes? Your old database could be in one
A kind of similar thing happened to me where I added a music album. It had some weird duplication issue where 2 album entries were created: one entry with all the proper metadata that did not correctly link to the files and one with no metadata besides song names that did link to the files. I had to remove all the files of the artist from my library so Jellyfin could completely remove the album entry. Then, when I added the artist back it read the album properly without duplication.
TLDR try removing the entire show and waiting for Jellyfin to wipe it from the library
This will be of zero help to you if your registrar isn’t Porkbun, but I’ve recently stopped using DuckDNS in lieu of this.
Duckdns has been inconsistent for me as well for the past year. Have you considered alternatives?
I believe the nameservers are what respond to domain resolution requests. Nameservers not responding could mean they are down. If there’s no backup and the domain is resolved using one of those servers, then that might explain it not working.
Are you sure? This sounds like the exact opposite
The desktop app should have maximum encoding compatibility so you direct play. It’s not guaranteed with browsers e.g. I believe Firefox doesn’t and will never support HEVC.
My gripe with the desktop app is lack of ability to easily refresh like with a browser. The UI bugs out sometimes and I end up having to close and reopen the app.
I believe the UDP ports are for discovery on your local network so no need to handle them with your reverse proxy. If you’ve got them passed through docker your local devices should pick them up.
They’re also not required since you can always just enter the address manually. I don’t bother passing them into my container.
They didn’t cut her out, but her role is greatly diminished compared to the first movie. It’s really a buddy comedy between Aquaman and Orm where one is almost literally a fish out of water
It’s smarter, but only if you don’t really care about getting the thing since not buying means you don’t get the thing
Worse than an NFT because you’ll always have access to NFTs as long as you have access to your wallet, whether it’s worth anything or not.
If you want to use Radarr or Sonarr you better be ok with TVDB metadata because that’s all they support and will likely ever support based on the discussions I’ve seen over the past few years.
https://github.com/gethomepage/homepage
Another vote for Homepage, fantastic project
Denying references to other places that directly compete with you seems pretty reasonable to me. You don’t see toaster boxes at Walmart saying it’s also available at Target or whatever
Use an Instagram-specific site container to isolate your activity from your normal browsing. Imo this is really the only thing that matters that doesn’t have to do with your self control. You want to make sure Meta gets nothing from cross-site tracking and containerizing IG should do that. Also, don’t visit links to and from IG. Look it up manually through IG search.