

I like MakeMKV. It also works flawlessly with modern formats like (4k-)BluRays. Also it’s super simple to use. Just throw your disk in, press the big shiny button and wait till it rips your disk. It even handles the decryption for you.


I like MakeMKV. It also works flawlessly with modern formats like (4k-)BluRays. Also it’s super simple to use. Just throw your disk in, press the big shiny button and wait till it rips your disk. It even handles the decryption for you.


Oh, one more thing regarding the ssh wizardry (lol!): It’s not that complicated. You can pass your command as last parameter. For example if you want to launch Dorfromantik (which you should btw), you could do it like this:
ssh me@mymachine "steam steam://rungameid/1455840"
That’s the whole magic. Like this it won’t start an interactive shell, but run the command and closes the connection once the command finishes.


A man, a word. This is my gamescope-session.sh
#!/bin/sh
export DXVK_HDR=1
/usr/bin/gamescope --hdr-enabled -e -- /usr/bin/steam-native -tenfoot
I’ve created a /usr/share/wayland-sessions/gamescope-session.desktop for it, so I can launch it from login screen (or auto start it in my case)
[Desktop Entry]
Name=Steam Big Picture Mode
Comment=Start Steam in Big Picture Mode
Exec=/home/chaser/bin/gamescope-session.sh
Type=Application
In theory this should run all games, that support hdr in hdr. At least Cyberpunk does.


If I remember correctly I had to give gamescope a flag to enable hdr at all. However there was an env too, to tell the windows games through proton, that the machine supports hdr. I’ll check my scripts later for you


To be honest I like this behavior. I haven’t enabled the hot word, so this is a really convenient way to launch the assistant. (It doesn’t has to be the google assistant btw)


+1 for Lutris! It’s not only good for games, but also for regular Windows software like FL Studio. Another “tool” I use a lot is ssh. I use Gamescope on my PC with Steam Big Picture mode. Gamescope gains a few more fps, than a regular de. Also HDR works just fine with it. See: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Gamescope However. Sometimes I need an desktop environment. So I created a Home Assistant automation, that allows me to switch to desktop. Now I have 2 buttons on my smartwatch. One to boot the PC and turn on the tv, avr, etc. The other for the desktop mode. I also have some nfc cards for my favorite games. Same thing here: When scanned they trigger a ha automation, which starts the games over ssh 😎


Welcomes! Btw: If you want to make it even slimmer, you can also remove features. Or you add some if wanted (like tilting, if your cover supports it).



I just use a tile card. Simple, but great!
- type: horizontal-stack
cards:
- type: tile
entity: cover.wohnzimmer_rollo_links
features:
- type: "cover-open-close"
- type: "cover-position"
- type: tile
entity: cover.wohnzimmer_rollo_rechts
features:
- type: "cover-open-close"
- type: "cover-position"


If you want to start cheap, I can recommend you to use an old notebook. In my opinion it’s the perfect home server for beginners.
Most services don’t need much. So it’s just fine if your “server” is like 10 years old. My first notebook server had 2 cores and 4 GB ram and it run Proxmox with like 10 lxc containers just fine.


I’m using MusicBrainz Picard. However there are some tricks to spare you some nerves:
It’s a jungle out there 🎶


That’s a cool approach! Reminds me of the old Napster 🤓


Awesome! I just learned something today. Thanks for pointing it out so detailed!


yt-dlp can handle YouTube Music Links. Just tell it with -x --audio-format mp3, that you don’t want the Video, but an mp3 (opus can’t be tagged). I use it to obtail whole artists, then I tag them with MusicBrainz Picard. I’m sure there is a way to automate this. yt-dlp has also a Python library. However I haven’t used it for now.
My internet provider offers up to 4 sim cards per account. They cost once 10€, without a monthly fee. However they have only 300mb of high speed traffic. But this should be just fine for a tracker, no? Just have a look in your customer portal. Maybe you’ll find something there too