I think it’ll happen at some point, nearly always does. I have one locked on an exploitable version and it works great, I think there’s a lot of potential for emulation and homebrew if it opens up more.
I think it’ll happen at some point, nearly always does. I have one locked on an exploitable version and it works great, I think there’s a lot of potential for emulation and homebrew if it opens up more.
OPS, rutracker, or I ask someone to check RED for me.
Aside from what has been posted already, the vast majority of good P2P groups only release on private trackers, some with notices to not repost publicly. There is a massive collection of quality content that is either not available on publics or completely dead and forgotten.
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A properly muxed mkv will display the resulting audio bitrate. And if you use opusenc, it will embed the encoder settings in the track.
There are a handful of groups putting out what I would consider decent AV1 encodes. A couple PTs allow them, and there are groups on 1337x. Just grab a couple from each tag you can find and see if they meet your needs. Generally speaking, look for groups which note their source, which encoder they are using, and ideally what settings they used in general.
AV1 has come a long way fast, but in my experience a good x265 encode is still better for live action.
Maybe https://www.srrdb.com/ is what you’re looking for?
Private trackers would be your best bet if you don’t know anyone already.
Good question. I chose it initially because it was open source and way easier (in my eyes) than Apache. I don’t recall the others being an option at the time, or I was not aware of them. nginx does what I need without complaint, so I haven’t switched.
I imagine that is due to plex cramming in their own streaming option. So the free stuff you see on the default home page (last time I used it). There is a setting in firefox to disable drm playback, but it looks to be a browser-wide choice.
As the other commenter pointed out, that feature does not exist in the webui. Just use mktorrent, torrenttools, or any other utility which will do it.
Unfortunately Cloudflare does not do .ca domains. I imagine this is because there are restrictions on who can own one, so it’s probably not worth the trouble for them.
I don’t see switch stuff in there. Did I miss it? Imagining it might have been removed to avoid the repo being destroyed.
I checked out the main feed, OP. Not sure this is going anywhere based on the content I saw. I have no opinion on the site as a technical work.
Have you tried ticking the lock metadata button when you are editing it?
Last I checked you need to purchase an addon to have port forwarding with Windscribe.
These are good options in my experience that are P2P friendly and support port forwarding.
Air is the cheapest out of the bunch, they might still have a sale going on now.
You can install the AniList and AniDB plugins and enable them on your library. From there, when you go to manually identify the series you can use one of the respective IDs to fetch metadata.
If it gets taken down, I will rehost elsewhere.
As mentioned in the post, from three sources. The two site dimps were publicly available as torrents. The third was distributed privately.
It’s feasible as long as all the stuff you want to auth supports oauth, oidc, or saml. It might be a bit overkill for your use case, unless you have a bunch of services you didn’t mention. Keycloak has a bit of a learning curve, but works great once you get past that.