I’m kind of a noob at this so I just want to make sure I’m on the right track. Most of my experience is centered around using public trackers and qbitorrent with a VPN on my laptop and Android phone (using flud).

I would like to get started using Jellyfin to serve up media in my house and occasionally remotely with my phone. I have an older HP desktop that was formerly a business PC. I am currently resetting it back to a fresh install (probably Windows 10). I was thinking of putting Jellyfin on there and setting up Tailscale. I have already tested setting this up on a different computer just to learn the setup process and I got it working and was able to remote connect with my phone. I have Cox cable internet and I’m using their provided modem/wifi gateway so I probably don’t have many options for customizing that other than port-forwarding. I also don’t really need to set up any automation to download media automatically at this time. I basically want to be able to download movies the way I currently do and put them on the Jellyfin machine. What else do I need to know/do? What am I missing? and will I be able to just pull up Jellfin on my phone and cast media to my smart TV’s (they do not have Roku btw)?

  • @Nawor3565
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    11 year ago

    It looks like setting up casting is possible, but a giant pain in the ass according to this guide. I would see if your TV has a Jellyfin app (they have apps for Android TV, FireTV, LG WebOS, and Apple TV), otherwise you might need to just buy a cheap Roku.

    In terms of watching outside your house, that will probably be difficult. Because we ran out of IP addresses, most ISPs use NAT which basically bundles a bunch of different users behind a single IP address, making port-forwarding impossible unless you pay extra for a static IP. You’ll have to figure out whether this is the case for Cox.

    • @ki77erb@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 year ago

      Also…I’m wondering about that guide you linked for setting up Chromecast, because the Android app has a chromecast button on it. That guide says “Chromecast requires that HTTP traffic be encrypted into HTTPS with a valid certificate.” but I can cast media directly from my phone with an app called Local Cast and I can cast directly from my laptop with VLC. Are those using HTTPS with a cert? I will test this out once I get it up and running.

      • @Nawor3565
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        21 year ago

        That’s a good question. That guide is specifically for a Chromecast, but maybe casting to another type of device works different, I’m not too familiar with the protocol. Definitely agree that just testing it out to see what happens is the best route

    • @ki77erb@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 year ago

      I was able to get remote viewing working with Tailscale so that kind of bypasses the need for a static IP address. It just requires turning it on the server and client device to work. Unfortunately I have a stupid ass Vizio TV with the worst bullshit smart OS ever so I probably will have to get a Roku device if I can’t get casting to work.