this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Technology

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[–] fred@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

What they don’t explain is that you need two accounts (or more) for these to work.

A Usenet account.

An indexer account that is basically a search engine.

You also need a download app like nzbget. And ofc you setup an account on that and plug it into sonarr.

And an account for the nas or storage if it’s not local.

Sonarr searches the index, finds the files, talks to nzbget and says “download that shit for me and put it together”. Nzbget uses the Usenet account to fetch the stuff, assembles the parts and tells sonarr I’m done. Sonarr then renames it and puts it on your nas.

It’s admittedly fairly abstract, even for someone seasoned in systems admin work.

[–] surrendertogravity@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

eh, as someone quite used to pirating on private trackers with qbittorrent, I didn't find it too difficult to conceptualize once I really looked at how the *Arr pipeline works - at least with torrents. Usenet is an entirely different beast that I haven't needed to tackle since torrents have everything I need so far.

As per most tech things, though, I don't think there's a good end-to-end guide out there (lots of piecemeal ones, though) and having good research skills and being able to fill in the gaps in guides yourself is pretty important.

[–] fred@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

As per most tech things, though, I don’t think there’s a good end-to-end guide out there (lots of piecemeal ones, though) and having good research skills and being able to fill in the gaps in guides yourself is pretty important.

Yeah for sure. For most non-techy folks using one of the arrs setups or even plex has a pretty steep curve.

It’s why Netflix will continue to make subs.

I think what’s missing from this article is they have had a show or two lately that have been solid. Ie: the Diplomat. And that will drive up subs. But not sure it has the staying power. Folks will flip back to something else when another service drops something good.