You can ignore all games from publishers on Steam. I’d recommend doing this with any publisher with anti-consumer practices.
Until they reach a deal with mobile carriers and start shipping with SIM cards…
Yes, modifying the value is going to break the mappings (see https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/blob/master/Emby.Server.Implementations/Localization/Ratings/us.csv). Anywho, I think we’ve discovered the root of your problem. How you choose to rectify it I leave to you! Personally, I’d recommend suffixing your filenames with [
as per ]https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/media/movies/ and letting themoviedb.org handle it all for you.
https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/blob/31aa44d23d12b5dbb5f9a131242cc82c9ef98f24/Emby.Server.Implementations/Data/SqliteItemRepository.cs#L2279 is what’s discovering similar content. If the InheritedParentalRatingValue
is considered zero, it’s only going to match other content with the same value. Can you elaborate on “I did change the name of the key for the rating variable in the metadata to be ‘MPAA rating’ instead of the default which I think was ‘rating’ before since I found it confusing.”? I suspect we’re zeroing (ha ha) in on the problem.
Hey, I’ve worked in the recommendations/similarity calculations. Could you post a screenshot of the detail page for Inside Out? I suspect your media doesn’t have associated metadata (e.g. tmdb tags) that are used to power similarity calculations.
Getting the code running, easy. Getting the pull requests moved forward, a lot more frustrating than expected.
https://lemmy.ca/post/6420647 summarizes my feelings on the latter.
I got a bunch of commits in around searching and similarity. https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/pulls?q=is%3Apr+author%3Abradbeattie+is%3Amerged, https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin-web/pulls?q=is%3Apr+author%3Abradbeattie+is%3Amerged.
I have a Switch but have bought maybe 3 games for it tops. Where Steam has user reviews, a super simple refund policy, and frequent deep discounts, Nintendo’s purchasing experience is clearly lacking in a customer-friendly approach.
Anyone asking for recommendations for their next gaming device, it’s Steam Deck every time.
Want to sabotage a protest? Encourage advocacy for increasingly tangential issues. Focus splits, folks start disagreeing on new issues, folks start disagreeing on how issues get prioritized, everything falls apart.
Sadly, this doesn’t even require a malicious actor encouraging it. Well-meaning folks see a potentially sympathetic audience for their pet issue and boom.
Totally possible to go overboard in either spectrum of complexity. But yeah, take Prometheus for example. It’s super easy to set up and does a great job of metrics. Reimplementing this in bash would require… a lot of work.
Or https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-width_space ? But seriously, just use unique random strings likely through a password manager.
Oh man, you read my mind: https://github.com/jellyfin/jellyfin/pull/7663#issuecomment-1758314971. Thanks for jumping on this!