Create the folder you want them in. Add that root folder to Radarr. Batch edit the root folder of all movies to the new folder. Click on move the files for me. Sit back for a few hours while it does the rest. When the process is done, then you come back and click that x.
Are you sure Youtube doesn’t pick video quality based on connection speed? It will frequently drop down to 360p when my connection speed is particularly shitty that day, and I’ll have to manually increase it (I’d rather have occasional buffering than a blurry mess).
I’m checking this out to see if it’s useful to me. I can see where being able to drop straight into a shell on a docker container would be handy. My only real gripe is that I can’t use it to connect to my free-tier oracle linux cloud VMs because they deploy OracleLinux out of the box.
I don’t begrudge you wanting to make a living from your work. It’s just frustrating.
I am going to try and live in it for a week or two and we’ll see if it sticks.
Yeah the commercialization model is not perfect yet. Ideally the community edition should include all normal features required for personal use. Would that only be like one machine to connect to or many? I was planning to experiment with allowing a few connections where a license would be required in the community version.
Hell yeah! I had bought a front end called lunchbox a long time ago but i havent got to install moonlight streaming either :) for midis that’s an awesome idea too. Maybe one raspberry PI for all music stuff… thats one way to organise things too
It is basically a graphical wrapper around your CLI tools like ssh, docker, kubectl, and more that gives you the features you know from tools like graphical SFTP clients but supports much more types of connections and allows you to use your favourite terminal and editor for your remote connections.
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