Gotcha I guess that makes sense, personally I haven't noticed any slow-downs but to each their own.
Is there something up with dark reader? I've used it for forever, and I've never run into issues. I looked up if anyone had run into anything, and all I can across was people installing from unofficial sources and getting malware.
ahh gotcha that makes sense thanks for the correction :)
Sites like 9anime are just big link aggregators, so you wouldn't need to upload anything. Just create a bot to scrap for the episodes them display them as embeds on your site.
I just realized you're on the sh.itjust.works instance, which was defederated from Beehaw so that also doesn't help.
Reference: https://beehaw.org/post/567170
That's a lot easier said than done. I'd love to move to Arch full time, but there are plenty of things I can only do on Windows, so I'll have to keep dual booting until then.
If you don't find something that works for you, you could always try doing a hand wired board. They're pretty fun and easy to do.
I generally only get that issue with subscribed new, which is why I generally use subscribed hot
I use subscribed hot generally. But sometimes I like to do subscribed new.
Maybe it's the communities you're subscribed to. Personally, my front page is pretty filled. Take a look at https://lemmyverse.net/ to see communities from other instances.
You'll want to look at either Plex or Jellyfin for your front-end streaming clients, personally I prefer Jellyfin for its customizability. For sorting media, you'll want Sonarr for TV-Shows and Radarr for movies. To find the magnet links to send to Sonarr and Radarr you'll need something like Prowlarr which will pull magnet links from the sources you'll specify. With that out of the way you'll need some way to take those magnet links and actually download from them and for my I prefer to use qBit, but any torrent client will work, just make sure to put it behind a VPN. Lastly, I'd set up Obmi to allow your users to make requests. In regard to the OS why not use something like TrueNAS compared to the guide which suggested Ubuntu, I've found the UI in TrueNAS Scale to be much easier to work with especially since all the services I mentioned are apps that you just pretty much one click installs.
Personally, I'd wait for better hardware.