We are pleased to announce the latest stable release of Jellyfin, version 10.10.5!
This minor release brings several bugfixes to improve your Jellyfin experience.
As always, please ensure you stop your Jellyfin server and take a full backup before upgrading!
You can find the full changelogs on the GitHub releases for the server repository and the web repository.
Release prepared with <3 by @joshuaboniface, the rest of the Jellyfin team, and contributors like you.
Happy watching!
A lot of these answers are working towards the idea of having consistent grapheme (letter or letter combo) to sound (phoneme) relationships. ie the letter 'a' would always represent the same sound, and that sound would always be represented by the letter 'a'. This is called ideal phonemic orthography.
English has whatever the opposite of phonemic orthography is; depending on your accent, the letter 'a' has about 7 sounds the most common being 'o' as in 'what'. It's extremely unhelpful when teaching kids to read English.
Languages seem to pick up a lot of cruft over time as they grow, absorb loanwords and just change because language, so you usually only move towards phonemic orthography with some deliberate act, usually by the government.
An example might be Indonesia really wanting a national language to tie a very diverse population together after the second world war. I think they still have a government department who makes pronouncements about the language. The result of this is you could learn to correctly pronounce Indonesian in about 10 minutes, and read an Indonesian newspaper to a native speaker and it would be almost entirely intelligible to them even though you didn't know the meaning of what you were reading.
Same with Wrapped. I can't read any books between the Goodreads Wrapped and the new year because I won't get social credit for them. And this is when I have actual time to read books. /s
I mean, yes, I could. But I'm committed to the #selfhosted life where I spend hours building unnecessarily complicated systems to make my life easier in small ways.
The process for this is to obtain an EPS32 with bluetooth and wifi, pair it to the scale with bluetooth then keep it powered on in range of the scale, then the data goes into HA?
I have the opposite experience of this. All of my local services are a single docker container inside an LXC. I don't like that it's conceptually messy, but in practice it's easy to manage. What I love about it is the simplicity of backing up or moving the entire LXC between servers.
I've not had any drama with things breaking across Proxmox updates. The only non-gui thing I need to do during the process is adding two lines to the LXC conf to have Tailscale work correctly.
#1: Cardio