timeliner
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timeliner | Radarr | |
---|---|---|
5 | 403 | |
3,548 | 9,154 | |
- | 3.1% | |
4.0 | 9.9 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | C# | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
timeliner
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I Ditched Google Photos
Heya! I'm the author of PhotoStructure, and my Google Photos account (before I started working on PhotoStructure) is about that size, too.
I wrote up some tips here: https://photostructure.com/faq/takeout/
This is what I did:
1. First try to fetch all your Google Photos via Takeout in one archive. If it fails (like it did for me), try different-sized .tgz archives. I had to use the 10 Gb option (using 50gb caused an internal-to-google error).
If that fails to work, the last resort is to manually create by-year albums, shove all photos from that year into that album, and do a takeout of just that album. Repeat as necessary for every year.
2. Install an app on your phone to *directly* upload the original photos and videos from your phone to your NAS/home server. I have several recommended apps here: https://photostructure.com/faq/how-do-i-safely-store-files/#...
At this point, you can still use Google Photos (for viewing and as a last-ditch backup), but your originals are safe (without all the Google Photo downsampling and metadata shenanigans), and you're free to use whatever self-hosted software you want (like PhotoStructure, but there are a ton of alternatives, as well).
FWIW, I also tried this software: https://github.com/mholt/timeliner -- it does what it can, but the files you get via the API has a bunch of metadata stripped from it. I even had captured-at times get mangled with older photos.
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Start Self Hosting
This is why I'm building Timelinize [1]. It's a follow-up to my open source Timeliner project [2], which has the potential to download all your digital life onto your own computer locally, and projects it all onto a single timeline, across all data sources (text messages, social media sites, photos, location history, and more).
It's a little different from "self hosting" but it does have a similar effect of bringing all your data home and putting it in your control.
The backend and underlying processing engine is all functional and working very well; now I'm just getting the UI put together, so I hope to have something to share later this year.
[1]: https://twitter.com/timelinize (website coming eventually)
[2]: https://github.com/mholt/timeliner
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Consider SQLite
Not a "big project/service" but a Go project that uses Sqlite is one of my own, Timeliner[1] and its successor, Timelinize[2] (still in development). Yeah the cgo dependency kinda sucks but you don't feel it in code, just compilation. And it easily manages Timeline databases of a million and more entries just fine.
[1]: https://github.com/mholt/timeliner
[2]: https://twitter.com/timelinize
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Can you synchronise Google photos to/from phones and computer bidirectionally?
This looks promising but might be a bit complicated for you: https://github.com/mholt/timeliner
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What is the equivalent of "Apple removed 3.5mm jack" of your favorite products ?
I made Timeliner to download my Google Photos: https://github.com/mholt/timeliner -- requires some tech prowess for now, though.
Radarr
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My Home Lab setup
Movies: Radarr
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Gzip compression questions for 2 use cases
I use Nginx for Sonarr/Radarr would I see any general performance benefit when loading their webpages in general? If so, what level of compression would be ideal for this case?
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I am looking for a troubled/bad open source codebase
In the /r/selfhosted community Sonarr and Radarr are staples, but their code isn't particularly great and there are lots of bugs people just deal with. Radarr forked Sonarr, their interface is similar but they suffer from disjoint bugs.
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/r/Plex's Moronic Mondays' No Stupid Questions Thread - 2023-07-10
There may be better places, since I've just stuck to the same one for years now (and don't need them often enough to look into alternatives), but I usually use either subscene or opensubtitles. There are also programs that can automate it like bazarr, but it requires you to also use Sonarr/Radarr.
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Yo Ho, Yo Ho, a pirates life for me!! Recent streaming services, prices and shows getting butchered, finally decided its time. Here's how a basic self-hosted 'Netflix' would look like. Fully automated once its setup. Using only a makeshift homelab server from second hand parts.
Radarr: Automatically downloads movies.
- How do i move my files and rename them but also keep it seeding with the original title for torrents?
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HELP! :)
Radarr is for movies. Sonarr is for TV shows.
- Netflix subscriptions rise as password-sharing crackdown takes effect
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eu_nvr
Github
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Home Lab Setup Recommendations
- Sonarr & Radarr for sailing the sea / keeping those media libraries growing ( https://sonarr.tv/, https://radarr.video/ )
What are some alternatives?
CasaOS - CasaOS - A simple, easy-to-use, elegant open-source Personal Cloud system.
CouchPotato - Automatic Movie Downloading via NZBs & Torrents
EverythingToolbar - Everything integration for the Windows taskbar. [Moved to: https://github.com/srwi/EverythingToolbar]
Sonarr - Smart PVR for newsgroup and bittorrent users.
MarkdownSite - Create a website from a git repository in one click
Playnite - Video game library manager with support for wide range of 3rd party libraries and game emulation support, providing one unified interface for your games.
yunohost - YunoHost is an operating system aiming to simplify as much as possible the administration of a server. This repository corresponds to the core code, written mostly in Python and Bash.
Medusa - Automatic Video Library Manager for TV Shows. It watches for new episodes of your favorite shows, and when they are posted it does its magic.
PhotoPrism - AI-Powered Photos App for the Decentralized Web 🌈💎✨
popcorn-desktop - Popcorn Time is a multi-platform, free software BitTorrent client that includes an integrated media player. Desktop ( Windows / Mac / Linux ) a Butter-Project Fork
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
overseerr - Request management and media discovery tool for the Plex ecosystem