• 6 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 15th, 2023

help-circle




  • There are always rules. Typically, in most trackers, you are required to maintain a ratio > 1, but there are ratioless trackers where they don’t care about the ratio. Also, you often have a minimum seeding time required meaning that you need to seed the content for X amount of hours (X varies from tracker to tracker). But it is not a big deal, because in private trackers you don’t have hundreds of peers connecting to you, therefore seeding doesn’t necessarily mean they are going to choke your bandwidth.

    If you need to build upload buffer (to improve your ratio), private trackers also offer Freeleech content, and seeding bonuses that you can exchange for virtual upload data. So with some time and little patience, you can download from PT anything.

    But again, each tracker has its own rules, and at the end of the day, these rules make the tracker better for you and everyone.



  • You had your Plex open to the public with that setup. That’s not secure at all, unless you wanted anyone to access it.

    If you can port forward from your own IP and it’s kind of stable, you can run a wire guard server to access your network and Plex.

    If you can’t portforward you can try a mesh network like tailscale… there are other solutions as well. The fastest apparently is netwmaker, but you need to have a server with public IP. You can use a cheap VPS.










  • In this case maybe the issue is not about the bunny. Perhaps she doesn’t want to go to school and she is focusing in the bunny thing to create a conflict.

    It happens with our kid too. He is about the same age and he has trouble with transitions. When there is something that he doesn’t want to do, then he creates scenarios that lead to conflicts. Like asking for a toy he knows he lost, or something that he doesn’t have, etc…

    What help us is to learn what’s really the issue and try to address that instead of the conflict.