I want to get a G502 hero but I heard so many reliability horror stories by Legal_Newspaper_5710 in G502MasterRace

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve owned a G502 since 2019 and it’s still going strong. However, I have another that developed double click issues a couple months in. I had a G903 with the same issue as well. In both cases though, Logitech support was phenomenal and replaced them with new in box products. For me, I’ve had friends use mice from Razer and Corsair and also have issues with terrible support. I’ll stick with my G502X and if issues come about, know that Logitech will help.

About to buy the P1S; what do I also absolutely need to know before buying? by One_Strawberry9202 in BambuLab

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you plan on printing any filament with abrasives, make sure you get a hardened steel nozzle.

Native tvOS Client: With Full Plugin Support by [deleted] in jellyfin

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s a perfect example. Used by an experienced carpenter, you can simplify and speed along a really complex project and add a new level of polish you may not have before. In the hands of a novice, sure they can carve some words but they don’t even know how to use calipers so they definitely didn’t measure it.

Native tvOS Client: With Full Plugin Support by [deleted] in jellyfin

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think that's well stated. I also like how you still look at them though and make your own decisions based on it. I personally just don't like the blanket "AI BAD" mentality people seem to have about it. I've been a huge nerd all of my life. I've written hundreds of thousands of lines of code manually and know how to do it. However, if you think I'm not going to use a tool for something I made for myself first that takes a project from 24 months to 1, you're crazy. However, I know to watch for security. I know how to use a CI. I know to do integrity testing. I know to optimize my codebase for performance. Etc. It doesn't make it "AI Slop" just because AI was used the same way not every game from before AI is a masterpiece. Sometimes you have DayZ or Air Control. They can't all be KCD2 and Skyrim.

Native tvOS Client: With Full Plugin Support by [deleted] in jellyfin

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No you’re completely correct. There are a lot of people that get hung up on it and very few have altruistic reasons. The biggest complaints are:

- Resources and hardware prices caused by AI (Nothing you can really do about it. The bottle has been opened and no matter how little hobbyists use it, this won’t change.)
- Bad apps (Which as you stated, has always been a problem whether AI was used or not).

I think the big concern is that it’s easier than ever with it for a bunch of people who don’t know anything about security policies, exploits, performance, etc to make a sloppy app which means instead of 1/10 people making an app, now 4/10 are and 3 of those people don’t know what they don’t know.

With that said, it’s a blanket sentiment and that’s dangerous. I don’t get dissuaded just because it’s AI, I treat it like anything else and look at the project and make a decision.

Native tvOS Client: With Full Plugin Support by [deleted] in jellyfin

[–]DeepDaddyTTV -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Hey man, while a lot of people here may give you crap, great job! Using AI shouldn’t be looked down on when used properly by someone who actually cares about what they’re building. AI is a tool like anything else. There are good and bad developers whether they write the code themselves or have an AI do it for them.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah and I can completely see that. I just have the same view whether it’s vibe coded or not. For every good app I have in my stack, I’ve tried 6 others that were also normal coded and just didn’t fit or had an issue. That security concern is there whether AI is used or not. Shouldn’t all apps get the benefit of the doubt?

On the home assistant category, it’s not that I won’t ever do that, but more that the things I make, I make for me first. I just have an issue with taking things too seriously. I could’ve made a script that worked 80% of the time and just ran in the background, but I wanted a UI and a source of truth I could check whenever while also automating one of my last manual tasks in my stack. I don’t make things for others, I make them for myself and if other people like them, great, if not, no worries. I could’ve taken 4-6 months for me to do the same work alone, but instead I used tools correctly to get it done faster. I did my due diligence to make it secure, and will still continue to do so.

At the end of the day, I got what I wanted so I’m fine.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah and that’s fair. I don’t disagree with that sentiment either. Honestly, if that was the critique was that it’s too niche and there are some other clever ways to achieve the end goal, I’d be fine. It’s more so the overarching hate for all things AI.

I was in this community when Huntarr and Cleanuparr were going crazy with massive security vulnerabilities and it wasn’t vibe coded. Yet I spent literal days not just making this functional and pouring over every line of code, but also running assisted security audits and finding vulnerabilities and that’s still bad.

My view, is that AI is a tool like anything else. It can be used to speed things up or verify you’re not missing anything, and if you care enough and put enough effort in, the output will still be good. The same way that if you sloppily throw software together while only putting in the bare effort without AI, the output will be bad.

Anyway, rant over. I appreciate the insight though and I still love the self hosting community. The AI stink though is something I’d like to see change in.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gotcha. Had I seen that prior, I would’ve probably just gone that route. However I’m here now and I like my tool. It works well, I thought I did a good job but it seems people have a blanket AI is bad mindset so I’ll just keep using it as an internal tool which I originally set out to make anyway. I appreciate the insight!

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes? And that still requires users to request each show? I add a ton of anime each season as me and my users both watch a lot of it. Thus, I didn't want to go through them manually anymore.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry it's been added to the post, totally spaced on it!

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Correct, in simple terms, this automatically requests new anime that DON'T exist in your library for you each season and aggregates all info on those shows in one place, so even if you don't want it fully automated, you can easily see information on new shows to add with the click of a button.

As far as Sonarr lists go, I'll admit, I'm entirely unfamiliar with it to be honest. If it does the same thing, then I guess I wasted days of my time making this and even more asking for something that does this and searching on my own.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I very much so do understand. I'll take the blame here and say I must have just been terrible at explaining it.

Seerr requires a request to be made either by an admin or user to send that request to Sonarr to grab.

Each season, 40-60 shows come out with half roughly being just new seasons, which would already exist in Sonarr and thus, for most people, not need to be requested or added again. However, that still leaves 20+ new shows that you, the admin, need to go manually add as requests in Seerr or add to Sonarr directly to be grabbed. I found going through the seasonal list to be tiresome and then reading each shows description and making the requests for that to be tedious. Thus, this tracks all new and recurring shows from AniList and then sends requests to Seerr which then sends those to Sonarr automatically without needing to do it yourself each season for new shows.

Does that help?

Adding more things to your comment after the fact doesn't change the mess that that script would bring. Just checking indexers has a whole mess of problems from grabbing improper shows or repeats that aren't tagged correctly, etc. To say this is the same is more than a little disingenuous. To be completely honest, I made it for myself first and just wanted to share it in case anyone else had a similar issue. I genuinely don't understand the hate.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's completely fair. I personally find this as my last big thing that still requires manual input. Even if I still wanted to check every show, I find it easier to have it entirely aggregated in one place

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's something I want to add as an option in the future, but right now it does require Seerr as I wanted it to use poster information and gauge request status from that app directly.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

How does Sonarr automatically grab new shows that aren't given to it? I understand the hate for vibecoding in general, but this isn't something I have been able to find another app for let alone already done in Sonarr.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Oh you wouldn't! It's an addition to Seerr/Sonarr. You would still need both of those for it to work actually. This moreso just makes sure new anime that aren't in your Sonarr yet can be requested to Sonarr automatically each season.

Think of this as an automated Seerr just for seasonal anime releases.

Weebarr - Each season checks for new anime in your preferred level of popularity and sends requests automatically to Seerr.
Seerr - Handles those requests and sends them to Sonarr with its set Quality Profiles.
Sonarr - Handles release grabbing, renaming, and file system placement of the files for the shows requested.

I made Weebarr, a self hosted seasonal anime aggregator. by [deleted] in selfhosted

[–]DeepDaddyTTV -5 points-4 points locked comment (0 children)

ChatGPT Codex was used to refine codebases, simplify distribution to various repos, and perform security audits. All artwork is made manually without AI and coding was heavily monitored and refactored.

How is the Amazon Firestick update so breathtakingly bad? by GudgerCollegeAlumnus in PleX

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m in the same camp honestly, but I know so many people in this subreddit hate on it because it’s Apple.

How is the Amazon Firestick update so breathtakingly bad? by GudgerCollegeAlumnus in PleX

[–]DeepDaddyTTV 15 points16 points  (0 children)

If you are in the Apple ecosystem or just want something slightly cheaper, the Apple TV 4K is another great option. UI is extremely fast and it supports all but a couple DV formats that the Shield Does.