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YouTube warns it might make your viewing experience worse if you don't turn off your ad-blocker
  • I pay for Youtube premium as a carry-over from Google Music (back when it was called Youtube Red). I let it run because I enjoy the screen off feature when I'm driving. On my desktop uBlock Origin still blocks 340 scripts/trackers even when logged into Premium. They not only want to eye-rape us with ads, but they want to track the fuck out of us across the web.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • I don’t know what to tell you then. 🤷‍♂️

  • Proxmox or NAS for Media Server
  • I run almost exactly the same thing. Plex running in Proxmox VM with a GPU passthrough, and an OMV instance in Proxmox VM hosting all the data shares. Proxmox also hosts multiple Docker stacks for various instances. This is spread out over multiple bare metal boxes.

  • On the morning train
  • An then there are those that swing days and nights who are stuck in perpetual limbo. My sleep schedule sucks.

  • A few Questions about reverse proxies and running your own Jellyfin server
  • I just recently set up a reverse proxy with Nginx Reverse Proxy, and Cloudflare. I pointed my domain to my home address with Cloudflare (they have dynamic DNS capability), then set up NRP, to forward traffic by subdomain. The nice thing about the reverse proxy it is I can bind a subdomain to an ip:port on my local network. Like "music.!MYIP!.com" goes to my Navidrome instance "LOCALIP:4553". This allows me to close unnecessary outbound ports.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • I agree. I spun up Navidrome because it's free. Plexamp does require Plex Pass (which I pay for, but others don't)

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • And I said offline syncing a playlist (1-2Gb), not 400Gb. Max 1-2Gb. I have 1.8Tb of music that I can stream in the rural midwest at any given moment providing I have a signal, and about 3Gb synced to my phone when I don't have a signal. Plex is smart enough to buffer the next few song in your playback queue so it will play seamlessly through bad cellular coverage. Spotify and Tidal work the same way. Is selecting a subset of Spotify's catalog annoying?

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • What problem? 200 tracks times 4mb/track equals 1Gb. If you can't spare a couple gigs of storage, you need to delete some apps off your phone.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • I store everything on an openmediavault nas and serve up using Plex, Navidrome, Audiobookshelf, and Calibre, all running in Docker containers.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • I live in the rural midwest with spotty cell service. All of those services support manual offline syncing to store music on your phone. I set Plexamp to stream lossy over cellular, and it doesn't take long to cache an entire playlist when I do have a signal.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • 1.8Tb stored on an 8Tb NAS drive. Plenty of room for more music hoarding.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • In my case, a self hosted streaming server works wonders. Plex with Pleaxamp, Jellyfin, Navidrome, Airsonic, any of them will stream to your phone while out and about.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • I really hope this is satire. If not, you're way off the mark. Lossy files do not intrinsically suffer any kind of bit rot. Bits are bits, and your storage interface doesn't have any clue what those bits mean. I have MP3s from the late 90s that have been stored on the cheapest CD-Rs you can imagine, that still play perfect.

  • Respect to anyone still managing a library of mp3s
  • Um, .wav is a lossless format. It's just raw PCM with no compression. An upscaled FLAC from a lossy source is not lossless, even though it's stored in a lossless compatible format (FLAC). A properly encoded and compressed MP3 file will sound very close to the lossless source, but when procuring those lossy files from third parties, you rely on whoever compressed them doing it properly. I prefer to store my music repository in a lossless format, and stream/sync in lossy.

  • Where to buy music
  • I mainly get my purchased music from Qobuz and Bandcamp. If it's older, don't dismiss compact discs, used or new. A lot of times you can get the CD cheaper than the digital download, then just rip it to any format you want.

  • Newbie looking for Budget External Sound Card/DAC with mic input
  • Maybe something like the Syba Sonic? I know it has both a mic and line inputs, plus a serviceable DAC. I found it on Amazon for $37 USD.

  • Replace Spotify
  • I forgot about TIDAL integration, since I'm not a subscriber. I only subscribe to Spotify for the family account. My three teenagers and my wife would all mutiny if I stopped paying for Spotify. I just now convinced them that Plex is stable enough to use for video. Small victories.

  • Replace Spotify
  • Plex server streaming to Plexamp here. Currently handling around 50k tracks all stored on my NAS no problem. Soundiiz supports Plex, so converting Spotify playlists over to Plex is pretty straight forward, provided you have the songs.

    • Plex pulls down it's own metadata, so if you're a tagging freak like me, you'll have to check the "Prefer local metadata" on your Plex server.
    • Smart playlists are a little cumbersome. They're actually saved filtered searches. Not intuitive at all.
    • No HiRes - if that's your thing. (on iOS, not sure about Android)
    • Plexamp has a separate EQ for each bluetooth device on iOS, but it can't differentiate between wired headphones using an adapter.
    • It does save music or playlists to the device for offline playback, but they're captured within Plexamp. You can't play those offline tracks in any other app (might be possible in Andorid, but the filenames will be random and idk about metadata). I have not run into an offline download limit, like in the old days.
  • Sci-fi books which don't involve too much space travels and massive world builds?
  • Eon by Greg Bear. It’s a bit dated as it takes place during the cold war, but it’s an excellent read.