Intel 7th gen & higher CPUs have Quicksync that does hardware h265 encoding.
You can get an old i5-7500 PC pretty cheap these days. That’s what I have, and tDarr converts about an hour of 1080p h264 content to h265 in roughly 10min.
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Intel 7th gen & higher CPUs have Quicksync that does hardware h265 encoding.
You can get an old i5-7500 PC pretty cheap these days. That’s what I have, and tDarr converts about an hour of 1080p h264 content to h265 in roughly 10min.
Comcast (no other ISPs thanks to local legislation). Suburbs of the 2nd largest city in my state (Michigan).
$84/month for 200/10Mbps with a 1.2TB cap.
You have it great.
I’m very slowly typing up a blog post on how I did it, but I had success tunneling my Plex through T-Mobile’s CGNAT by running this Docker container on my local machine and on a free (technically PAYGo using always-free services) Oracle Cloud account.
Much like Cloudflare, this is for sending specific-port traffic through the tunnel.
You’d be surprised. They even block incoming IPV6 traffic.
I wonder if it plays nice with CGNAT and ISP port blocking…
(looks at my T-Mobile 5G gateway…)
I’m partial to OpenMediaVault…
Definitely consider 16GB if you’re using Immich. I started with 8GB and had to upgrade. (on the bright side, 32GB DDR4 was just over $40)
I’d also say that an i7 is likely overkill for your use case (despite other comments here).
I run an i5-7500 with PhotoPrism, Plex, tDarr, and about 30 other services. The power draw barely registers on my 1000W UPS (this includes my SFF PC, external USB HDD, and 3 network switches). And my CPU rarely jumps above 20% utilization.
I would say at least 7th gen Intel. Its QuickSync is one version newer than 6th gen, and QuickSync didn’t get another update until the 10th gen CPUs.
7th through 9th gen CPUs QuickSync added h265 encoding, and 10bit h265 decoding. Also there are the all-around speed & quality improvements that come with each QuickSync generation.
Most Reddit mods love their little artificial power bubbles too much.
That’s why most of them quickly opened shop back up when Reddit threatened to de-mod them.
They’re not going to give it up to run /c’s here that are 10% the size (or smaller).
Yeah. A year or two ago, Plex added a thing where you can add any show or movie to a “Watchlist”, no matter what service it’s on.
Overseerr can already automatically pull in that in and turn it into Radarr / Sonarr requests. I would think Reiverr could eventually do it, too.
I’ve got one friend who just cancelled all of his streaming services, and is asking for only the most recent season of stuff he watched.
So, Overseerr actually works in his favor.
Can you request specific seasons or episodes of a TV series that way?
Yep, I have that enabled in Overseerr. A couple people have used it. But mostly, people prefer to manually request stuff with Overseerr.
Unfortunately, it usually takes a minute or so to get Overseer to load.
It’d be really nice to have a web interface that primarily links up to Sonarr & Radarr (minus the playback part) – just for requesting stuff.
Though Plex login integration would be nice, also – especially if I’m exposing it publicly. And that also opens the possibility to auto-import peoples’ Plex wishlists.
Was curious to take a look as an Overseerr replacement (Overseer has been running painfully, painfully slow for awhile)
But it looks like Jellyfin is currently a hard requirement to use Reiverr (I have Plex).
If I was the only person using my PC, I’d probably make the jump.
Unfortunately, my wife would end me if I tried that.
7th gen Intel (Kaby Lake) can encode h265, also. Not just 8th gen.
Source: I encode to h265 almost daily using Quicksync on my i5-7500.