by James Wallace Harris, 6/29/23
I recently wrote "The Emerging Mindset of Not Owning Movies" about converting my DVD/BD collection to digital files so I could stream through Plex. But I soon realized that converting hundreds of discs was too much trouble, so I gave up. I figured it would be worth the money to just subscribe to a bunch of streaming services instead.
However, in the weeks since I discovered some TV shows and movies aren't available on streaming. The trouble is I just don't like using disc players anymore. For example, I exercise by watching Miranda Esmonde-White's Classical Stretch program. I have a couple seasons on DVD. When I was testing out Plex I converted them to files that I could stream through the Roku interface. It was so much nicer than loading the disc every morning.
Another reason why I gave up on Plex was I thought I needed to buy a Synology NAS and buy 2-3 very large capacity hard drives. Something that would take several hundred dollars.
Well, I had a breakthrough this week. I realized that I neither had to convert all my discs to make Plex worthwhile nor did I need a robust RAID system to store my video files. All I needed was just the files I would watch, and if I was only converting discs that aren't on subscription streaming services then that wouldn't be very many at all.
I bought a 512GB SSD for my Intel NUC 11. The NUC had a place for a second short SSD card. It was $59. Installing Plex again was three minutes. I put Classical Stretch, Survivors (1975 BBC show), and the last three seasons of Perry Mason on the drive. I could subscribe to Paramount Plus to watch Perry, but I didn't want to add another subscription right now.
Plex streams videos off the SSD extremely fast. Almost, instantly. Way faster than the 8GB mechanical hard drive I was testing Plex with before. It's extremely convenient.
When I finish Perry I'm just going to delete its files off the SSD. Not having to build a secure backed-up library makes things so much easier. Now, if I want to watch something I own on disc I'll just rip it and put it on the SDD, and when I'm finished, I'll delete it.
For some reason, coming up with this solution has made me very happy. I don't need to mess with a second computer, or a NAS, or spend endless hours ripping and maintaining a library of video files. I've even simplified the ripping process. The proper method for ripping was to rip with Make MKV and then shrink those files with HandBrake. Then copy the files to the server and make a backup somewhere else. It was very time-consuming.
Now I just use MKV and save its .mkv files directly to the SSD. I don't worry about shrinking the .mkv file to conserve space or backing it up. If I know I want to watch something that night that's not on a subscription streaming service but I own the disc, I just rip it while working at my computer, and it's ready for watching on Plex later when I want to watch TV.
I've very happy with this solution. I love to figure out solutions that are cheap, streamlined, minimal, and make things easier. This means I need only one computer, and I don't need DVD players and their remotes. I recently got rid of one TV, leaving just two (one for me, one for Susan). That was satisfying too. I also put away one CD player and turntable. I only stream music now, but I left one CD player out in case I do want to play CDs. However, it's just so much nicer not messing with those machines. I regret buying my Audiolab 6000 amplifier and CD transport. I wish I had gotten another Bluenote Powernode.
Over the past couple of weeks, I've simplified my life by getting rid of several machines. I also gave up having a second computer, a Linux machine. I have less to worry about. I realize that I'm zeroing in on something. That I'm focusing my efforts and resources.
JWH
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