![]() ![]() not having to find and get in a private tracker.not having to deal with false seeding reporting on public trackers (website says there's lots of seeders but there isn't).Not having to deal with crappy releases on public trackers.I don't have speed issues, but even if I would, I would still prefer Usenet for: ![]() ![]() The most common is that Usenet max out your connection every time, while torrenting depends on seeding. Could also be that your downloader needs to be fine tuned. Some internet providers throttles Usenet ports. That is less demanding than converting video, but that doesn't mean it can't also cause stuttering. Finally, if the audio stream of the file is in a format that your playback client/device does not support then Plex will have to convert it on the fly. You can sort of get around this by using external SRT files for subs if your client supports that. Turning on subtitles if the subs are embedded in the file will also cause the Pi to transcode. Depending on the resolution and quality of the video stream this may be too demanding for the Pi to handle, so you may experience playback stuttering. For example, if you have an mkv file with a h265 video stream and you try to play it back on a client that doesn't support h265 then the Pi will try to convert it on the fly. Transcoding is when the Pi has to convert the video or audio stream on the fly. If that's all you want to do then you have the setup you need. H264 playing direct isn't hard, I have managed it with a Pi 3+. The best thing? The base model is only $20 $5!.ĭo you know a related subreddit? We'd love to know. Welcome to /r/raspberry_pi, a subreddit for discussing the raspberry pi credit card sized, ARM powered computer, and the glorious things we can do with it. Pi project ideas: There's a huge list right here on this sub! Friendly reminder: Please don't just post pictures of unused pis - do a project!Ĭomplete r/raspberry_pi Rules Check the FAQ and Helpdesk here ![]()
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