- 0 posts
- 16 comments
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex’s crackdown on free remote streaming access starts this week - Ars TechnicaEnglish
7 monthsUsing jellyfin on Chromecast. For the past 3 weeks I’m stuck not being able to use it because some update broke subtitles support for external players. App became useless, I can’t downgrade it, and the bug is still not fixed.
Not going to use Plex, just my 2 cents.
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Sync for Lemmy@lemmy.world•He has abandoned sync development but not the businessEnglish
7 monthsI just patched the APK to block the ads.
I hate software that doesn’t support Unicode, and it’s also not difficult to implement. At one point I wrote a dll that hacked a way how one app was handling filenames, to force it to use CreateFileW instead of CreateFileA. Just that allowed it to support Unicode filenames basically.
The interpreter knows that this is not something anyone will ever do on purpose, so it should not silently handle it.
You basically defied the whole NaN thing. I may even agree that it should always throw an error instead, but… Found a good explanation by someone:
NaN is the number which results from math operations which make no sense
And the above example fits that.
"hello" - 1makes no sense at all.Yeah but actually there can be many interpretations of what someone would mean by that. Increase the bytecode of the last symbol, or search for “1” and wipe it from string. The important thing is that it’s not obvious what a person who wrote that wants really, without additional input.
Anyway, your original suggestion was about discrepancy between + and - functionality. I only pointed out that it’s natural when dealing with various data types.
Maybe it is one of the reasons why some languages use . instead of + for strings.
If you try what I wrote it will throw a NaN. I was asking about the first part of the proposal.
- should also do some string action
Like what kind of string action?
“Hello” + " world" is what everyone can understand. Switch with “-” and it becomes pointless.
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex is locking remote streaming behind a subscription in AprilEnglish
1 yearMy problem with it, it’s like WinRAR trial. I know I will never subscribe. Developers know I will never subscribe. They lost me as a potential customer when they refused to revise their pricing model. I switched to Jellyfin and will not go back to Emby. Guess a lot of people did the same, so I can say it’s their own fault.
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Plex is locking remote streaming behind a subscription in AprilEnglish
1 yearEmby subscription costs a lot even if you just want to use it on a home server. It can work without subscription but will display a warning before playback. Jellyfin is free.
- 2 years
It actually seems more like a windows 10 compatibility dilemma for developers. You can support older systems but it would require some effort. The problem is not the absence of some specific certificates, but the absence of newer ciphers altogether.
This does give security but also removes backwards compatibility with some clients that might be important for some websites.
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•TriliumNext Notes - The last note taking app you should ever needEnglish
2 yearsJudging by the size, just another electron app.
- rdri@lemmy.worldto
Programming@programming.dev•Is this the electron-alternative we've been waiting for?
2 yearsThe folks who only know JavaScript and refuse to learn more deserve to be blamed for electron’s (and similar) continued existence, and therefore for excessive resource usage.
There should be a better indication than a blank space I think.
- 2 years
How about shoving them into the Options screen instead?
It doesn’t seem like the problem in question is yours to begin with though. Maybe the train will get stopped or people will get released.




Android TV / Chromecast: subtitles are broken since November for external players. Literally stopped watching my shows.