

Just found Fladder, too. It’s even better, imo.
Works on desktop operating systems, even.
Eskating cyclist, gamer and enjoyer of anime. Probably an artist. Also I code sometimes, pretty much just to mod titanfall 2 tho.
Introverted, yet I enjoy discussion to a fault.
Just found Fladder, too. It’s even better, imo.
Works on desktop operating systems, even.
Nextcloud Office (aka Collabora) has been the nicest in my experience.
I came from google drive. I did a google takeout of my drive contents, dumped it into nextcloud, and every document so far has opened without trouble.
Cross-platform, too! Neat.
Now I have a new client to recommend to my dad. Findroid is android only. (As the name suggests)
If you want a jellyfin app that actually manages the downloads, letting you both watch and delete the downloads in the same app, try Findroid.
Like already explained, the web-app based clients just download the media files. You can obviously watch them using any media player that way, and delete the files when you’re done, but it makes things a bit clunky.
For music, there’s Finamp (FOSS) and Symfonium (Paid, but really good, and with active dev).
I’ve never considered that a limitation.
You only need one other person in addition to yourself, for a good discussion.
If anything, here I’m finding I actually get replies, because my comment didn’t drown among a hundred others.
You could. The original file is print quality.
You can find a 1.3GB download of posters in the extras on GOG.
The franchise isn’t dead, they’ve already confirmed work is happening on more… It just won’t be DLC for 2077.
I’m mostly hyped to find something that can sync media to local storage on something like a laptop, without it just being a bunch of files in a folder you play in vlc.
It also runs in a browser. I’m testing replacing the default webUI with it.
Once it’s on the app store, it’ll basically be available on everything. The same UI everywhere, but with features like offline media, unlike the default webUI.