CoreLabJoe

joined 2 months ago
[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Like almost all FOSS and closed source software, they have analytics yes and it is covered in their privacy policy. Guessing you did not make it to that part of the review?

The difference and it's an important one, is that they do not sell your data. No 3rd party data sharing or sales which is actually better than a lot of even FOSS software.

Everything you use collects your usage metrics, google, your phone regardless of vendor, Microsoft, Apple etc... No different except that this dev team does not sell your data, which the others assuredly do.

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 0 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Fair enough, all solid points.

BTW - I am not the dev of JellyWatch.

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 0 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Thoughts on the JellyWatch privacy policy which seems very clearly stated & cut? Does not alleviate concerns? I mean we all use a LOT of closed source software everyday, who tells you they WILL sell your data vs stating clearly they will not. Like Microsoft & entire family of apps, Google & all it's services, etc etc...

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 0 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Interesting... I dunno exactly what you mean by that but I am looking to 'revamp' or 'facelift' the site soon so I am open to honest constructive feedback.

Wandering onto a movie set in a 'good way' or you mean it all feels 'staged' which gives you mixed feelings?

The goal of my site (ignoring this single post for a moment) is to provide comprehensive technical info for self-hosting & digital sovereignty. I got so sick of having to sift through 3-5 sources of into to get a little help getting something working, or only finding very basic use cases and topical level info. So, I figured I'd go deep on the things I cover and provide technical info on.

Please take a poke around and let me know via DMs, here or via email to joe@corelab.tech your feedback!

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 0 points 1 month ago

Exact same functionality as Overseerr and Jellyseerr since it's the merged product of both!

 

Always wanted a mobile native app to manage Jellyfin? Discover JellyWatch - an Android app with "Arr" integration, real-time stats, and a killer "Watch Pass" feature.

Plex users have Plex Dash - a beautiful, native mobile app to see who is streaming, kill bandwidth-hogging streams, and check server health from anywhere. Jellyfin admins? We’ve been stuck trying to load the full web dashboard in a mobile browser, fumbling with a desktop web UI on a 6-inch screen just to kill a stuck transcode. There's also Tautulli which has had great adoption among Plex users.

Hit the full link to read a deep-dive on the setup and features!

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 3 points 2 months ago

I switched over last night, migration guide here, it's really easy!

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 24 points 2 months ago

Blocking them locally is one way, but if you're already using cloudflare there's a nice way to do it UPSTREAM so it's not eating any of your resources.

You can do geofencing/blocking and bot-blocking via Cloudflare:
https://corelab.tech/cloudflarept2/

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 4 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

It's literally based off the NAS comparison guide I posted... This is like a text book way to move forward for someone. My solution is like a giant all in one+a NAS, but a lllooottt of people have a decoupled solution.

One of the beautiful things about self-hosting; do what you want.

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (5 children)

Welcome to the self-hosting trenches. Don't worry about the "burning yourself" part - in this hobby, we consider those "tactical lessons." Everyone has ah, "re-started" things at least a few times!

Actually, your plan isn't "not very smart"—it’s a classic move we call Decoupling Compute from Storage. It is the most future-proof way to build a Digital Fortress. By separating your "Brain" (HP Mini) from your "Vault" (Asustor), you ensure that if one fails, the other stays standing. This is a great move.

Here's how I see your planned setup:
**The Command Center: HP Z2 Mini - Xeon and Proxmox **

The Xeon 1245-v5 is a beast compared to that Celeron. Running Proxmox here is exactly the right call.
The Strategy: Use that M.2 drive for your Proxmox "Data" (the LXCs and VM boot drives). Services like Immich and Navidrome rely on fast databases; running them on an SSD on the Xeon node will make them feel lightning-fast.

The Gear: With 32GB of RAM, this is what I'd call an "Elite Node." You have plenty of head-room to grow.
**
The Vault: Asustor (Celeron N5105) **
TrueNAS SCALE is "Heavy Armor." Running it on a 2-bay Celeron is like putting tank treads on a scout bike - it’s overkill and eats up the limited RAM that Celeron has to offer.

The OS Choice: I’d strongly suggest OpenMediaVault 8 (OMV) for the Asustor. In my 2026 NAS OS Comparison Guide, I categorize OMV as the "Lightweight Tactical" choice. It’s built on Debian 13, is incredibly lean, and is the best way to turn low-power hardware into a rock-solid network drive. You’ve already tasted the freedom of a custom OS. Going back to ADM now will feel like a "vendor-lock-in" cage. OMV is the perfect middle ground... **
How they talk to each other **
Wipe the Asustor, install OMV, and set up a simple NFS or SMB share. In Proxmox, you "mount" that network share. Your apps on the HP Mini will "see" the Asustor drives as if they were plugged in locally.

Is it a good idea? Yes . If you ever want more drive bays in the future, you just swap out the Asustor "Vault" for something bigger (like a 6-bay DIY build or a UGREEN box), and your HP Mini "Command Center" never even has to go offline.

I recently broke down the "Battle Card" for why OMV is the king of low-power storage nodes in 2026. You might find the comparison table helpful for your specific hardware: NAS OS Comparison

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 2 points 2 months ago

Yeah honestly CBC Gem isn't expensive in the grand scheme of things (Especially if you get the annual sub on sale) and has pretty good Canadian content!

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 2 points 2 months ago

Hey thanks for the update & reading the post!

I know they are available, when someone can find one! But people are still reporting the region lock issue right up to Nov 2025! https://troypointinsider.com/t/onn-setup-out-of-country/125239/32

I also had this snippet in about the ethernet: "😲Warning - The Onn 4K Ethernet Bug & The Fix: The Onn 4K Pro has a known firmware bug with generic USB Ethernet adapters. If you want hardwired Gigabit speeds, you MUST use an adapter with the ASIX AX88179 chipset (like Cable Matters), not the Realtek ones."

 

Stop thinking of identity theft as a "hack." Learn how corporate negligence and data aggregation fuel the Canadian black market, and why your info is at risk.

This is part one of a Canadian series, teaching you how to fight back and react to protect your personal info and get your digital life back if you've been SIM swapped or your social media has been hacked!

[–] CoreLabJoe@piefed.ca 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I haven't used Kodi since about 2014 so I wouldn't feel comfortable giving advice about it to be honest. That and IMO it became cumbersome to manage with a higher barrier technically, for entry compare to plex at the time, and now we have jellyfin as an option of course.

The last person I know using Kodi switched to jellyfin about 2-3 years ago.

I have a step by step guide on how to deploy the aarrrs and even a docker compose generator =)

https://corelab.tech/arr-stack-docker-compose-guide/

 

Hello PieFed! I feel there's not enough content in regards to tech or self-hosting focused on us Canucks, so I started writing a blog last year. A lot of it fits into anywhere as it's all centered on self-hosting and cybersecurity but I specifically write some posts & chunks of posts, directly for my fellow Canadians!

Welcome to Core Lab =) Operated & Self-Hosted in Canada, by a Canadian.

I personally 'cut the cord' back in 2012 , tired of the high costs and limited options of Canadian cable. Over the last 14+ years, I’ve moved from trying basic OTA antennas (Mohu Leaf anyone?!) to advanced automated self-hosted setups using Plex/Jelly and/or Real Debrid integrations!

I wrote this guide to save you the trial and error. It filters out the outdated advice and shows you exactly which hardware and streaming protocols actually work for reliable, high-quality streaming in Canada in 2026. Let me know if you have any questions or if this guide helped you out!

Disclaimer: This post does contain some affiliate links, but no ads ! I'll never have popup or in-line ads...

 

Hello PieFed! I feel there's not enough content in regards to tech or self-hosting focused on us Canucks, so I started writing a blog last year. A lot of it fits into anywhere as it's all centered on self-hosting and cybersecurity but I specifically write some posts & chunks of posts, directly for my fellow Canadians!

Welcome to Core Lab =) Operated & Self-Hosted in Canada, by a Canadian.

I personally 'cut the cord' back in 2012 , tired of the high costs and limited options of Canadian cable. Over the last 14+ years, I’ve moved from trying basic OTA antennas (Mohu Leaf anyone?!) to advanced automated self-hosted setups using Plex/Jelly and/or Real Debrid integrations!

I wrote this guide to save you the trial and error. It filters out the outdated advice and shows you exactly which hardware and streaming protocols actually work for reliable, high-quality streaming in Canada in 2026. Let me know if you have any questions or if this guide helped you out!

Disclaimer: This post does contain some affiliate links, but no ads ! I'll never have popup or in-line ads...

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