EGirlEnthusiast

joined 1 year ago

Well torrents are slow, typically, and unless the video you wanted to watch had i high amount of seeders, that can cause issues. When i use it, i sort by the number of seeders, and then find the highest balance of quality vs seeders.

You can disable and tweak transcoding settings, but it might mean that certain media isnt going to be able to be played at all, if its a certain format. If you have a beefy computer, this shouldnt be an issue, but if not id check this out: https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/transcoding/

[–] EGirlEnthusiast@lemmy.fmhy.ml 7 points 1 year ago (6 children)

I'm a 20 year old. I may be the only one in this thread unable to drink legally lol

The community literally has reddit by the balls, and are just gonna let go by ending to so early. Good thing at least some are permanently shutting down

 

I'm aware there's wikis and stuff around but is there a community to discuss it yet?

Seems as though there isn't many communities out there right now

[–] EGirlEnthusiast@lemmy.fmhy.ml 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

The distros that 'just work' are typically referred to as beginner distros. Not that there is anything wrong with them, im running one myself. But those usually include Linux Mint and Ubuntu. These come with packages pre-installed to make your experience less of a pain to setup.

Well in terms of anticheat, VM's require immense amounts of knowledge to avoid detection. Ive heard specifically that Rainbow Six: Siege will ban you for playing under VM, as well as Valorant. Dual booting is best to avoid anticheat, but if that doesn't matter, then a VM with passthrough can be extremely performant.

Currently using Mint 21.1 with KDE Plasma as a DE

[–] EGirlEnthusiast@lemmy.fmhy.ml 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)
[–] EGirlEnthusiast@lemmy.fmhy.ml 5 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Yes. Actually made this account today, and here are my first impressions: The learning curve is existent, and likely the largest problem with mass adoption. The way communities work is cool, but not easily explained to end users. But now that i see how it works, i like it better. Now we just need the content and community to thrive.

Well thats concerning. Hope the revenue they get from API access and forcing ads will offset the communities they are pushing away. Im about to delete my reddit account over this. Lets hope lemmy can gain traction.

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