Yes Ubuntu can read NTFS. And yes, Iâve found Plex runs happily on low spec Linux machines. Running mine on an Ubuntu VM with 2GB ram allocated quite happily.
Plex install on Linux is very easy from memory.
Comment on Daily Discussion Thread: đŠââŹđ§đââŹđ»đŠ Monday, October 28, 2024
TinyBreak@aussie.zone âš3â© âšweeksâ© ago
ordered a ânewâ PC to take over plex responsibilities. The old XPS is starting to show its age. Heres my question, do I go Linux? Or stick to win 11? Iâve heard Linux performance is a lot better, but my experince is pretty limited to a few Ubuntu Distros. The other challenege is my library sits on a 12tb internal drive on the XPS. Is Ubuntu going to be ok reading off what I assume is NTFS?
Yes Ubuntu can read NTFS. And yes, Iâve found Plex runs happily on low spec Linux machines. Running mine on an Ubuntu VM with 2GB ram allocated quite happily.
Plex install on Linux is very easy from memory.
any special deployment of Ubuntu required as far as drivers go? I know you can just chuck it on from a live USB but Iâve never actually optimized anything. Frankly, it runs like crap on Windows.
Depends on your hardware. I recently installed Ubuntu 22.04 onto an old Dell laptop with zero issues. If youâre using new hardware youâre more likely to have issues.
Nah its a Optiplex 7070, nothing fancy so hopefully plays out the same as yours. thanks heaps!
Iâm literally running Plex on a Synology DS220+ NAS with all the usual addons in docker containers. I only use it locally and have had zero issues (Besides it getting laggy when downloading from Usenet at nearly 1gbps but Iâll give that a pass)
I put Debian on my optiplex with xfce as the desktop environment and it uses less than a gig at idle. Debianâs great too because it has a slow update cycle so you donât need to worry about anything breaking. You could set Plex to autostart so you never actually see the OS, then you have free extra RAM from using a lighter system
I was just reading about the whole snaps debate. No experience with Debian but I might give Mint a go. Sounds like its the darling child these days.
I first used Ubuntu and found snap to be really slow so I switched. Iâve put Mint on a computer and it works great. Itâs justified in being the new linux favourite.
The UI has been designed to look a lot like Windows as well, so itâs easier for people to make the switch
does it have a built in âtake controlâ for folder management? if so, that could be a winner!
Taleya@aussie.zone âš3â© âšweeksâ© ago
win 11 is such a cluster of bullshit the hassle of setup is gonna be about the same, but the nix box isnât going to rape its own hardware to death and snitch on you for mp3âs
TinyBreak@aussie.zone âš3â© âšweeksâ© ago
I booted 11 because it was installed and just to make sure the desktop runs (and I new how to review system specs on windows easier). Having to use OOBE to bypass account creation requirements is such bullshit.
Taleya@aussie.zone âš3â© âšweeksâ© ago
Yeah theyâre trying to force a google style garden walling. Fuck that noise.