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My wife likes to cast YouTube from her phone
Could that work if you connect it to LAN but don't allow it to communicate outside of your network?
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Nope, sponsorblocked.
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Could that work if you connect it to LAN but don't allow it to communicate outside of your network?
I'm 99% sure "casting" a website just opens that site on the device and gives you remote control. It gets the data through the WAN, not your phone.
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How has SmartTube been for you? Is it an Android only or does it work on other platforms?
I’ve been a FreeTube user for years, but YouTube’s aggressive countermeasures has mostly rendered this program unusable (I use on Linux). Devs put out fixes but they work for a handful of days before YouTube breaks it again.
wrote last edited by [email protected]SmartTube is, afaik, only for the Shield Devices and similar ddevices - so not really for Smartphones. Most of the time, it is great but for some reason I often get a network error message and the videos stop. So sometimes it's annoying. Haven't found a good solution yet
For smartphones, you can still download ReVanced. When Vanced was closed, they started again with revanced and it works like a charm. It has all premium features (like background listening) and blocks adds, even sponsored or fillers. The problem is the download, if you ask me. Because there is an official webside, but the download starts after it redirected you to some suspicious add website...
Alternatively, you can download NewPipe. If you don't care that you can't login, it's a perfect app. In my opinion, it's not really needed because you can save your profile (backup) and restore. It also blocks all the adds. Best app so far (IMO). It can be downloaded in the F Droid store.
For YouTube music, a good alternative is Kreate. Also available in the FDroid store.
If you have any further questions, ask me anything. Would be glad if I can help
Edit: NouTube is also a good alternative to YouTube premium, but I'm not really happy with the app. My complains are about some details though, so generally speaking, it's worth a try
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Oh, I've really wanted to self-host and do something like that, but I didn't wanna spend too much more money than I have (recently bought drives and a bay) and figured I'd use old/outdated/broken laptops to save money and be environmental, but I've been thwarted by proprietary chargers (an old Acer) and screens not turning on (a broken Mac). I'm a college student so I don't wanna drop my money too much in a month (gotta learn to budget somehow right?). Might ask my college IT if they've got old shit around instead.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Using castoff hardware is a classic first homelab setup. You dont need an actual server to setup a homelab either. Old desktops do the job well enough. I personally run a cluster of 3 of the small desktops i recommend in my last comment, if slightly beefer models. They work great. This site keeps a comprehensive list.
If you're looling for next steps, this is a great general guide. Id personally recommend proxmox of the options he lists. Its a hypervisor that will let you slice up your physical server into virtual machines, letting you split out services like a pihole/*arr stack/jellyfin/kodi in a very sane way.
Linuxserver.io has a huge list of services that you can host with containers inside those virtual machines.
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At this time I'd like to shill for Sceptre. They make tvs and monitors that don't have all that stupid fucking "smart" features. I do not know of another brand that still makes dumb screens.
I bought a Sceptre TV as my first big purchase after graduating college and it's still kicking nearly ten years later. Sure the speakers died a few years ago and several buttons on the remote no longer work, but it sure isn't spying on me. And the picture quality is honestly not bad for what I paid
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At this time I'd like to shill for Sceptre. They make tvs and monitors that don't have all that stupid fucking "smart" features. I do not know of another brand that still makes dumb screens.
(sort of) unrelated, but I found a Sceptre CRT Monitor in the woods and it's one of the best tube displays I own.
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I'm 99% sure "casting" a website just opens that site on the device and gives you remote control. It gets the data through the WAN, not your phone.
With how laggy and horrible casting is, for me, I can confidently say that's not how my TV works
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It's Pi Hole. Everything's computer.
I have an old raspberry Pi (512 mB one...maybe? It's been a while since I hooked it up). Does anyone have a good guide to follow on setting up a pi hole?
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It's Pi Hole. Everything's computer.
Can someone please ELI5 why I should get a pihole and not just set up Surfshark or similar VPN on my router?