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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • That’s a good point. Another one I have is sort of failure tolerance. I used to have a really unreliable router which would often crash and could only be reset using a full power reset. While it was in this state, wifi obviously stopped working but my zigbee devices where still available. I used to have a zigbee button linked to a smart plug for toggling my router off and on again.

    This shouldn’t be a concern for most people obviously but I wanted to share my experience.

    Another point I want to mention is that zigbee works at 2.4Ghz just like basic wifi so they can still interfere with each other.

    Zwave on the other hand uses another frequency (I think it was around 860MHz) but is more expensive.


  • Scrath@feddit.detoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldReplace Spotify
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    1 year ago

    Performance is good and streaming works well. Not a fan of the webinterface personally but there are client programs available for all platforms since navidrome exposes the subsonic api.

    Personally I use sonix on windows and linux as well as symfonium (paid but really great app) on android.

    The only thing I am missing from it is better user management so that I can restrict specific users from accessing parts of my library.

    Regarding access from outside my network I specifically wanted to avoid needing to be connected to a VPN so that's why I use a cloudflare tunnel. Since my upload rate is not very good I have a Pi-Hole DNS server at home so that queries to my domain while in the home network don't need to leave my network.


  • Scrath@feddit.detoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldReplace Spotify
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    1 year ago

    +1 for navidrome.

    I'm also using that and have it exposed to the web using a cloudflare tunnel. What I didn't like in the beginning but really appreciate now is that the service itself doesn't have a lot of permissions and cannot delete files or change their metadata. I'm hosting it in a docker container and everything except the config file is mounted read-only.

    I'm not sure how relevant that is but it gives me more peace of mind exposing it publicly.







  • Can definitely confirm this. I started with a Proxmox system which had a TrueNAS VM. TrueNAS just used a USB HDD for storage though. Setting everything up and getting the permissions set correctly so I could connect my computers was a pain in the ass though.

    Later I bought a synology and it just works. Only thing I would recommend is getting good HDDs. I bought Toshiba MG08 16TB drives and while they work great, they are obnoxiously loud during read and write operations. They are so loud, that even though the NAS is in a separate room I have to shut it off at night.

    Meanwhile the Seagate Ironwolf drive I used for TrueNAS was next to my bed for multiple months and was basically silent.