I'm almost the first (I run multiple VLANs and SSIDs using pfSense and Ubiquiti hardware) but my server is an old PC sitting under my desk and my cable management strategy is mostly "out of sight, out of mind". I'm also heavily invested in the Apple ecosystem, especially for smart home stuff, so not everything is open source. Basically I have a complex network setup because I actually make use of it, but I really don't enjoy working on it and if there's an easy solution, I'll go for it.
horse
Strange then that Google and Apple didn't take it down. Valve made a choice and not a good one.
I checked the logs and it said it was assuming a remote connection because there was an unknown hostname in the headers (I forget the exact wording). It was because the hostname I was using didn't match the hostname configured in the server's OS (one I set up on my local DNS server).
~~I don't think simply forwarding the port actually works with free Plex anymore. I think if the server has a different public IP from the client it asks you to pay, even if you're connecting to the server over LAN.~~
Edit: That doesn't appear to be true. I'm not entirely sure how Plex is checking whether you're trying to stream remotely. In my case at least it works if I connect to my server using the LAN IP, but not if I use DNS (even though it resolves to the same IP). Maybe I'm missing something to allow it to work using the hostname.
Working "watched" labels on the Apple TV client would be nice. Not having those is a deal breaker for me considering 99% of my use case is streaming media to my Apple TV over LAN.
I have Jellyfin running along side Plex in case I want to do remote streaming, but I never use it and generally just copy the files for what I want to watch to my laptop if I'm going to be watching something away from home. Or I can just VPN in to my home network.
If you can share the cost of a VPN with one or more other people (most allow multiple devices to connect at the same time), it'll be much cheaper. Or if you can't afford that either, try to find someone who will let you use theirs for free. Maybe you can even find someone who isn't tech savvy who will pay you a few bucks a month to cover the VPN in exchange for you downloading Linux ISOs for them.
Mein Namenschema basiert auf Pferden. horsebook, horseserver, horsephone, pegasus (für den WLAN AP, weil Pferd das in der Luft ist), SSID ist horse's stable, usw.
Nicht so richtig und wenn doch war ich zu faul was richtiges zu essen und hab mir dann einfach n Brot oder so reingezogen anstatt was vernünftiges zu kochen.
Glaube aber zum Abnehmen taugt das nicht so gut. Man müsste die ganze Zeit kiffen und das hat viele "Nebenwirkungen". Außerdem isst man dann viel Müll und bewegt sich noch weniger, wo ich mir vorstellen kann, dass das bei Menschen die zu Übergewicht neigen nicht so gut ist. Ich bin halt auch von Natur aus ein Lauch, durch's Kiffen dann halt noch mehr.
Kann ich so bestätigen. Habe wesentlich mehr Appetit seit ich nicht mehr kiffe und habe auch eher zugenommen (was bei mir gut ist).
Have you ever got in a car to go somewhere to do something fun? You can die doing that too, but millions (billions?) of people drive every day.
Eating an apple is healthy too unless you choke on it. Accidents can happen doing healthy things.
People don't choose their hobbies based solely on risk. I love riding road bikes. There is a (small!) risk of death or serious injury in that sport too. But I love doing it and it's one of the most fun things on earth for me. If I died and it was possible to ask me afterwards if I'd still do it, I might say no. But you don't get to make these decisions retrospectively and so it's worth the risk to me.
I don't get that vibe from Berm Peak. If he's rich I can understand that he'd ride expensive bikes himself, but he seems to often make a point that more reasonably priced or old/used bikes can be just as fun, which I think is great when the marketing around bikes seems to try to push people to always want the newest high end stuff.