Understood. I set a strong password and a max login attempt on my account.
If someone does get into my account, wouldn’t they only be able to watch what I have on my server anyway?
Understood. I set a strong password and a max login attempt on my account.
If someone does get into my account, wouldn’t they only be able to watch what I have on my server anyway?
That was the problem, I couldn’t access anything away from my LAN. I finally figured it out though. I’m using Pangolin to access my services outside of my LAN and by default it adds a SSO option. Once I turned that off, my iPhone app was able to find my server through my domain name just fine. Thanks!
So I’m another newbie dummy to reverse proxies. I’ve got my jellyfin accessible at jellyfin.mydomain.com but I can only access it through the web. How do I share with other people who want to use the apps? I can’t get my apps to find my instance.
I’m responding to the stupid misleading headline. The series X (according to the article) is not the challenge. It’s the series S that is. Regardless of Microsoft’s dumb rules, the headline is misleading and disingenuous.
The series S, not the series X which is close in power to the PS5.
I’m on iOS and I’ve tried all the big ones: pocketcasts, overcast, Castro, Apple Podcasts. The only one I can get to work at all is Apple Podcasts if I give my local address and not my public address.
Yes, I have that variable defined in my compose file.
Honestly I’m surprised more people don’t do it. Its so easy.
I can’t seem to get any podcast app to recognize the RSS feed. I’ve got audio only media downloaded and my Pinchflat server is publicly available but all the podcast apps I’ve tried say there is no media when I copy the RSS link from Pinchflat. Any suggestions?
Gotcha. Jellyfin is my backup server behind plex so I’ll just keep it shut off unless I’m using it and set all security things I can within jellyfin when I am using it.
How likely is it someone even finds my server and domain?