Hey there! I’m looking to pirate sports and streaming services that I can’t afford. Could you please explain in simple terms of how to do this on an iPhone, iMac, iPad, and Apple TV? I’m really exhausted and my brain is blank. Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated!

  • mbirth 🇬🇧@lemmy.ml
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    6 hours ago

    First, you buy an eye patch. And maybe some small and energy efficient computer. A Raspberry Pi 5 might even be enough for your first steps. Or maybe some small form-factor PC. Then you install Linux on there and follow one of the various guides for Linux.

    I’m really exhausted

    We all are!

    • Emi@ani.social
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      6 hours ago

      I was looking into getting raspberry pi to make a home server for data storage and jellyfin but it’s similar price to a notebook. I’ll see if there will be some cheap notebooks since windows 10 is ending, the only problem would be how to connect HDDs to it since through USB it would be slow I assume.

      • remon@ani.social
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        6 hours ago

        Unless you’re doing multiple 4k streams from the same HDD, neither the HDD nor the USB connection will be the limiting factor. However, depending on how many drives you plan on adding, the USB-hub and cable management will get messy eventually.

        • Emi@ani.social
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          3 hours ago

          Just two either 16GB or 20GB HDDs to work as backups of each other. The USB hubs for the HDDs would need to be powered.

          • remon@ani.social
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            2 hours ago

            The USB hubs for the HDDs would need to be powered.

            If the HDDs themselves are bus-powered, yes. But larger HDD enclosures often have their own power supply (which just adds to the mess of cables).

            Just two either 16GB or 20GB HDDs to work as backups of each other.

            That’s how I started. And eventually I ended up with 6 USB drives connected to my 2 bay NAS.

            If you’re certain that you won’t have to expand your setup anytime soon, go for it. But if you want to future proof, I’d recommend a 5 bay NAS instead of laptop and put 2-3 HDDs in there to start with. Shouldn’t be that big of a price difference but will give you the option of easily adding more storage later.