Jump to content

Corrupt_Liberty

Member
  • Posts

    588
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Corrupt_Liberty

  1. That's not a good idea. You need to add Plex as a system user and give plex permissions over /usr/lib/plexmediaserver and whatever directory you're storing your media in.
  2. https://support.plex.tv/hc/en-us/articles/200288596-Linux-Permissions-Guide I'll try to help more when I'm home from class. You have permission issues though.
  3. Laser printers are MUCH cheaper to run. While the toner cartridges are generally more expensive they last for thousands of pages instead of hundreds. Also they are a dry powder instead of a wet ink that can dry out if it isn't used often enough. I can't tell you how many times I'd go to use my printer that I haven't used in awhile and the ink cartridges would be completely dried out.
  4. yes. And you can check it with sudo service plexmediaserver status
  5. I do like it easy. I get an alert. Check the forum for issues after a couple days. SSH in, download and install the new update just like you install it now. No repositories to worry about and the file comes straight from PLEX. I like to stop the service before I run the update. I don't think it's required though.
  6. I've never had a problem manually updating when I need to. I actually like this better because I can watch the forums for problems before I decide to install the new update.
  7. copy that Should be wget https://downloads.plex.tv/plex-media-server/1.4.3.3433-03e4cfa35/plexmediaserver_1.4.3.3433-03e4cfa35_i386.deb
  8. I actually downloaded the file on my windows machine and transferred it to my server with Winscp.
  9. Looks pretty fancy but I've been very happy using my PS4 controller when I need it. Works good on just about anything I've needed it for. I've tried a few others but have been disappointed for the most part.
  10. The name of the file should specifically say 32 or 64 bit along with the revision number. You might want to go to the website and download it directly.
  11. SWEET MOTHER OF GOD,man! You just sell the failures on eBay?
  12. I can't imagine they sell a lot of the 4.9 chips even at MSRP. Would you buy a CPU at full price knowing someone else has already unboxed it and put the screws to it with little result? They should probably mark those down at the very least.
  13. When I built my Haswell system I would have been happy to pay an extra $150 for a guaranteed overclocker. As it sits I can barely hit 4.4 at 1.45v. That's a bit high for a daily driver. I keep it at 4.3. How exactly do you bin your own CPU's?
  14. I wonder how much money they lose on CPU's that don't make the cut. How rare is a 5.2Ghz 7700k? The 5.1Ghz is pretty reasonable.
  15. I will definitely have to consider them for my next build. Hell, I'm very tempted to grab that 4790K right now.
  16. I just ran across a website that sells binned CPU's. Silicon Lottery Has anyone used their services or purchased a CPU from them? If so, was it a good experience? Would you deal with them again?
  17. I don't think you have anything wrong here. Haswell is one seriously hot bitch. They also have notoriously bad thermal interface between the die and the heat spreader. I have no problem hitting 80c with my 4770K @ 4.3Ghz and 1.35v. I've never been able to get 4.4Ghz stable without going hitting 1.45v and that's just a bit too high for my liking. I've thought about delidding but my CPU has never thermal throttled. I don't think I'd see any benefit for the risk. We can't all win the silicon lottery. (Although I just found siliconlottery.com bins CPU's for a price, I wonder if it's legit).
  18. I guess that depends. Did you try installing the 64-bit package instead of the 32-bit package?
  19. When I got mine I immediately upgraded the RAM from 6GB to 16GB and swapped in an SSD. The stickers I could care less about.
  20. Probably a better love story than Twilight.
×