You should put it in Jellyfin web's root folder (paths are relative to it). In the official container it's /jellyfin/jellyfin-web
.
Then you just @import "theme.css";
.
You should put it in Jellyfin web's root folder (paths are relative to it). In the official container it's /jellyfin/jellyfin-web
.
Then you just @import "theme.css";
.
Nobody mentioned it, so it's either really obscure or way too obvious, but: Nirvana (1997).
A game developer finds out that the main character in his next title has become sentient and must save him from endless suffering by deleting all copies of the game shortly before it launches. I saw it many years ago, and really liked it. It hasn't aged perfectly, but all the important cyberpunk bits are there.
It is not different from how the previous shared libraries worked. I guess it's there to stop cheaters from buying a single copy of the game and sharing it with throwaway accounts.
Sniper got a spycy way to hold the knife
Romero's Night of the Living Dead is in the public domain as well.
You can find it in the Internet Archive here: https://archive.org/details/night_of_the_living_dead
It could be an issue with the codecs (browsers are usually pretty limited in what they support). You could try to use a client like Jellyfin Media Player instead. It bundles libmpv, so it plays almost any video format there is.
Since you are sharing anecdotes, let me join.
For me FF has always been extremely stable, and I too regularly keep 100+ tabs open, on much more limited system resources. It is so stable that I've completely disabled history saving, and if there is something I want to read later I just keep the tab open. Never had an issue.
Tree Style Tabs also pushed me to have many tabs, because now I can actually organize those that I've opened and find them later.
Honestly, I don't even remember. It was something to do with minor differences in the cursor movements of specific commands.
Anyway, it's been years, anything may have changed in the meantime. I should probably give it another go, those were simple nitpicks that I was too impatient to tolerate.
It's a path inside the container, but not inside
/config
. You should mount the file like this: