Anyone else going basic with their NAS?
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
wrote last edited by [email protected]I'm one or those as well, but instead of VLC I use NOVA player on Android devices because of the remote sync.
Said that I'm using WebDAV shares as SMB is way slower. Is it just me? Any other protocol suggestion? -
Yes. And No.
I have a home made (arch btw) NAS that stores all our files - mostly via syncthing, even from remote family.
That was it.
Then I installed Immich so that we could see the photos... so... it's technically just a NAS, but it does now have a web application running on it...
Videos & Music are on a completely separate MythTV box which existed before the NAS - I saw no point in moving ~3TB of data to a separate box that would need to be powered when I want to watch / listen to something... my NAS powers itself up & down throughout the day to save electricity (and it was interesting to learn how to make it know when it was / wasn't being used)
Nice! Thank you for sharing your experience.
How did you get your NAS to know when it was being used?
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
Tbh setting up all cool frontends has always mystified me but I like minimal terminal interfaces and use stuff like MPD, Yazi, etc. and it seems like a pain to manage this big thing. I think the benefit really sets in when it's something you're sharing with others.
Like, I'd love to have all my documents in a folder written in pure markdown via vim, but hedgedoc helps me share and collaborate with my friends. A lot of people who operate these services share them with family, so I imagine ease of use helps. Tracking can be huge for people as well, but idk I just write down my episode list or have a separate tracker app.
Speaking of, Yamtrack is really good for that.
Overall, I feel like minimal UIs really help me focus instead of getting lost, but sharing my media via Jellyfin is one of the few reasons I want to do this in the first place. I like providing access to obscure media that's hard to get ahold of for my friends. So I'd say I'm a mix. Minimal stuff for myself, but interfaces for friend/external access.
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
wrote last edited by [email protected]I have 5TiB of media and I’ve never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
I'm closing in on 80 and I feel a very strong need for one
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I have 5TiB of media and I’ve never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
I'm closing in on 80 and I feel a very strong need for one
What are your reasons? Discovery / searching?
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Tbh setting up all cool frontends has always mystified me but I like minimal terminal interfaces and use stuff like MPD, Yazi, etc. and it seems like a pain to manage this big thing. I think the benefit really sets in when it's something you're sharing with others.
Like, I'd love to have all my documents in a folder written in pure markdown via vim, but hedgedoc helps me share and collaborate with my friends. A lot of people who operate these services share them with family, so I imagine ease of use helps. Tracking can be huge for people as well, but idk I just write down my episode list or have a separate tracker app.
Speaking of, Yamtrack is really good for that.
Overall, I feel like minimal UIs really help me focus instead of getting lost, but sharing my media via Jellyfin is one of the few reasons I want to do this in the first place. I like providing access to obscure media that's hard to get ahold of for my friends. So I'd say I'm a mix. Minimal stuff for myself, but interfaces for friend/external access.
Thanks for your experience.
It seems a common reason to set up a frontend is for family use. I suppose that is a logical extension of designing a system for its users - if someone wants to use it a certain way, they get to use it that way.
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What are your reasons? Discovery / searching?
Yep both, especially searchig for specific episode titles which are very often not included in the filenames. Or with anime, where many shows can have half a dozend different titles.
Also to keep track of what I watched and being able to easily resume watching on a different platform.
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I don't really get the whole NAS thing i must admit. Most of what I read about what people are doing is enabling slacker family and friends ? (That's not a critisism, just an observation)
I have a TV, a HDD connected on the router and Kodi on the Nvidia Shield Pro. Any music is stored on my phone, or streamed via Netradio
I very occasionally copy media across to my phone to watch and then... it sits there and I dont watch it.
My parter uses Kodi on the TV occasioanly.
I don't stream anything aside from some YT occasionally (DIY etc)
I get people do endless shit with their NAS, or server but I'm am retired and don't have the time
Books are managed via Calibre on a a Kobo.
My NAS ist almost exclusively backups. Just installed TrueNAS to have a GUI for ZFS and NFS.
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Nice! Thank you for sharing your experience.
How did you get your NAS to know when it was being used?
I could only assume he's using WOL (wake on lan) then auto sleeping after a while of no activity.
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I'm a fan of simplicity.
Which software do you use to run your NAS? I have TrueNAS scale.
I have an older version of TrueNAS on it from when it was still FreeBSD based (instead of Linux). I might replace it with Scale whenever I get around to doing maintenance on it next -- or maybe just go to stock Debian or something since I don't use most of the bells-and-whistles.
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
Not quite the same. But my NAS does files. That’s it.
Everything else is hosted elsewhere.
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
Today I'm dependent on my Jellyfin and Truenas setup, and I am exposing only one folder via SMB to manage my media from my laptop when I need to. This works great for me as I can stream my media to any of the multiple TVs and FireTV sticks around the house, and Jellyfin allows me to pause play on a device and resume on another.
My setup grew over time to adapt to my changing needs. If your setup works for you, that's great! Keep it, use it and adapt it as soon as your needs change. This is the beauty of self-hosting: you setup what you need, how you need it.
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What is a "tmm" stack? Sorry for my ignorance.
Sorry short hand for tiny/mini/micro. Lenovo tiny, dell micro, and HP mini, some generic used, some I grab from work after their desktop life is done.
Great little workhorses
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I have network storage. That's it.
I want to watch anime? I open the series folder from the mounted network share and watch it in VLC. I want to listen to music while on my walk? I open Solid Explorer on my phone and play the MP3. I want to read ebooks? I just open the file in whatever reader app I want.
I have 5TiB of media and I've never felt the need to set up any kind of hosted frontend.
What am I missing out on? Anyone else run their NAS like this?
Thanks all.
I've got an older AMD bulldozer platform with 16 or so tb behind it. SMB serves up all of the media to Nvidia shield platforms running Kodi. Away, I'll wire guard in to my network to remotely access media and compute as needed. I'm a big fan of not running a bunch of integrations that would fail at a time I'm just trying to watch something and relax; IT support at home after doing it all day sucks.