| ▲ | ssl-3 2 hours ago | |||||||
Those are fine ideas. But I'm not all about getting something like Tailscale to work with my elderly mother's Roku device, nor teaching her how to use it. | ||||||||
| ▲ | ray_v an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I set my dad up with a Linux box as a daily driver for him - he keeps the desktop on , and the roku jellyfin now has a clean proxy into jellyfin over the tailscale network. Giving him a desktop I can remote into was a great decision that paid dividends for him :) | ||||||||
| ▲ | asixicle 20 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
You can point Tailscale toward a $5 exit-node VPS and Caddy/nginx through a cheapo-but-memorable-domain to get a Jellyfin Dashboard up in a browser. I assume running the domain and port through the Jellyfin Roku app would work fine (can't be sure as I've never used a Roku). Just mind your ACLs | ||||||||
| ▲ | lamasery an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
Get your elderly mother an Apple TV and infuse, then connect with Tailscale. It’s pretty friggin’ smooth in daily operation. Apple TV’s UI is no easier to get lost in than Roku, and actually has fewer pitfalls if you toggle one setting (the one that makes one home tap open the Apple TV app, and a second press while in that app actually go home, by default; switch that to always go home on any press of that button no matter what) I dunno if Tailscale works on Roku but otherwise that would indeed be entirely viable too, last I saw Jellyfin’s app on there is really good. Likely need a server powerful enough to transcode, though, lots of (all?) Roku devices don’t have hardware decoding for newer codecs like h.265. That’s one big benefit of an Apple TV, it can hardware decode damn near everything. | ||||||||
| ||||||||