Eden for Switch and Cemu for Wii U as well.
Plus a number of options for the older consoles and handhelds, but Retroarch would cover those.
Eden for Switch and Cemu for Wii U as well.
Plus a number of options for the older consoles and handhelds, but Retroarch would cover those.
Another vote for CWA. It’s been a year and I can fully remember my reasons for not going with something else, but I tried several and nothing was quite as complete for what I needed.
I also don’t want or need much for automation. I want to curate my library, there are few authors I’d want to monitor and grab everything from. Then from a metadata front, CWA lets me easily search for and cherry pick bits of metadata.
Navidrome server on the NAS. If I’m away from home and using a computer, I have it exposed to the internet and just use the web app.
On my home computer I’ve been using PsySonic lately and like it quite a bit. Quirks here and there, but it does get updates.
On my phone, and so just about everywhere, I use Symfonium. None of the FOSS apps I found last year did it for me. Symfonium is ridiculously customizable.
That still doesn’t help me understand why you would clone the entire repo just to install the docker image. You create the compose file (and the variables file if that’s how you roll) and docker handles the rest. For someone who is already admitting their unfamiliarity with things, the whole idea of getting comfortable with git just seems unnecessary and unhelpful in this context.
It’s fine, you don’t need to reply again. Just different outlooks, I guess.
No, I get that the repo isn’t, but all you need to spin up the container is the compose file, right? I’m just trying to understand, not argue. I’m not completely comfortable with git, and just about “good enough” with Docker. So if I’m missing something, I’d like to learn.
Just curious, but why bother cloning the repo just to copy out the text of one file? For compose files I usually just copy & paste, then edit what I need.
I have a Beelink Mini S that I got 4 or 5 years ago (N5095, 8GB RAM, 256GB SDD). It was $200 new at the time. It’s easily handling the hosting of 20-25 services.
For the little that you plan on doing with it, I think you could grab just about anything.