

it’s definitely something. Not sure how we wound up on this trend; I’m just here, along for the ride.


it’s definitely something. Not sure how we wound up on this trend; I’m just here, along for the ride.


That would be pretty awesome! I personally like giving money to folks as compensation for borrowing their skills, but free is a nice add. The current icon is actually pretty nice and works well, but since it’s LLM-generated I wanted to replace it with a human creation.


For anyone interested in the configarr config I use, here you go. It’s somewhat customized to my taste (especially dubs > subs for anime) and there’s likely an issue or inconsistency or two in it that someone more familiar might be able to spot, but it works pretty well and I’d say it’s a good starting point if you just want to get going.
Note that it’s a kubernetes ConfigMap but it’s not hard to pull the relevant info into docker for your own needs.


as always, the answer is “it depends” - everyone has their own unique flavor of *arr stack with different components. Breaking it down, everything revolves around the core apps:
These apps do the majority of the hard work of going from eg. “I want this movie” to “this movie file is now downloaded and placed into a subdirectory on my NAS or storage somewhere”
Realistically, all you need to get started is a download client (usenet, torrent client, whatever - the most popular choice is qbittorrent-nox or an equivalent docker container), your *arr app(s) of choice, and a way to consume and share the media you’ve now downloaded to your NAS or server (plex, jellyfin, stash, audiobookshelf, VLC, etc)
For consuming media, here’s a non-comprehensive list that most people will recommend at least one thing from:
The rest of the *arr ecosystem serves as a way to automate this core idea or fix issues with that automation. An example from my own homelab:
Not all of these will be useful to you, and you’ll likely find others that are more useful for your situation. Like I mentioned, everyone’s *arr stack is different and unique.
My recommendation: start with an *arr or two, configarr (optional but really recommended - hard to set up but once you do you’re good forever), prowlarr (optional but you’ll thank yourself later if you ever get into this and end up with more *arrs), and unpackerr (really do recommend this one) and go from there.


Not sure what you mean by that. I occasionally use the web UI as the tool that it is and I’ve played around with opencode, cursor, etc previously on other home projects to get a sense for where things are and what the limits of these things are. That said, I take pride in my own work and this project is no exception. Is there something in this project that makes you think I threw a prompt into cursor and am passing that off as my own? Or are you against the idea of using an LLM and consider any person or project using them at all to be vibecoded?
As a quick edit, I’ll note that, since I documented any use of ChatGPT reasonably well in this project, you can see the number of times it was used and what it provided. I feel the contributions were largely inconsequential and really just time-saving on my end. I also vetted (and understood!) the output and modified it according to what I wanted. Personally, I don’t consider that to be “vibe-coding” but I suppose everyone has their own definition.
Edit again: ugh, it’s far too easy to focus on negative feedback and let that consume you. I am not going to defend my use of ChatGPT but I personally think that someone seeing the word ChatGPT and saying “oh so this is vibe-coded” is disingenuous to the project and my skills as a developer. I spent years learning and mastering Java and this is a lot of my experience and several weekends of my free time. Look, if you feel that the four uses of ChatGPT, much of which have been modified by my own hand and all of which inconsequential, constitutes a vibe-coded system then that’s your take - but I don’t think it’s a fair take. There are many things to be said about the ethics of modern LLMs and over-reliance on them but personally I think understanding and effectively using tools at your disposal is a skill. If you want something completely free of LLMs these days you may very well have to invent the universe.
Phew. Okay, I’m off my soap-box. Consider me got. I’ll try not to think about this too hard but it definitely feels bad pouring your time and skills into a thing and seeing that one comment saying “nah this isn’t worth anything”
From the above post:
So, if the RSS systems work just fine for you, then that’s great! This is a tool made for the people who have found the RSS searches have failed them for one reason or another.