Cool trailer including 24 of this summer’s movies compressed into 150 seconds. Enjoy!
Compilation courtesy of ScreenRant
Cool trailer including 24 of this summer’s movies compressed into 150 seconds. Enjoy!
Compilation courtesy of ScreenRant
So, the big news yesterday was that the Windows Home Server 2010 (Vail) beta preview was released. I spent a good half hour reading up on it and once I soaked it all in, I decided that this preview was absolutely not worth the time when comparing it to the currently available WHS. The beta imposes many limitations and lacks a lot of expected functionality to make it worth wasting time formatting a system and installing it.
I’ve been compiling my own builds of Media Browser ever since a repository was made available to me. For the majority of that time, the majority of the issues I had to contend with dealt with the expected bugs of untested code. However, many months ago, the caching system was introduced in order to speed up the loading of our libraries. This was a very welcomed edition as it tremendously sped up the loading of my collection, which consists of somewhere over 10,000 individual movie files (not to mention the image and metadata files that accompany them). What this introduced was a new issue, unfortunately. It doesn’t happen that often, but when it does, it can make upgrading a nightmare when you depend on the watched status that is one of Media Browser’s media management features.
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