I really want to get into jellyfin streaming, but I am a noob and have not much knowledge about hardware and video tech, and I could need some help! Please apologize if some of my questions seem uninformed.
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My plan is to store my DVDs on an external HDD, I already have some movies stored with makemkv. 
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I do not want to spend a lot of money, at least for now. Synology is out of question because of enshittification. But I don’t have 300-500€ to spend on a mini PC, for a project I might abandon. 
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What I have is an old Raspberry Pi 3, where I could set up a Jellyfin server on. 
 From what I gathered, it will be slow AF, but I guess for trying out the technology it should be enough to start?
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I want to stream to mobile devices, for example an Android phone or tablet, or my Hisense TV. I know already there is no Jellyfin app for the TV, but I could imagine setting up another pi as a client for it. 
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Now there is another problem: I do not really understand what transcoding is, or if any if my devices support the H265 codec making transcoding unnecessary. 
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Can you recommend me a low cost setup, let’s say max. 150€? Would a Pi 4/5 work, or does it need to be a mini PC? 
I am not really interested very much in 4k, but if it is possible, why not.
Bonus question: How easy would it be to setup remote streaming so my SO could watch with their android phone from home?
- I’d invest in a used x86 SFF PC over a RPI for performance, you will pick one up cheap and it’ll be way better suited for a media server over a RPI. - Look into Tailscale for remote access. Very easy to setup and their free tier is generous. (100 devices I believe). 
- Rpi3 is pretty slow but you’re right it’s ok for testing. - Jellyfin doesn’t pretend to do external access well. Some people put a proxy in front of it, others do something like Tailscale to create a private network over vpn. Then you set up the Tailscale app on your mobile devices and it should activate for specific ip addresses or dns names. - Consider using tinymusicmanager to fix up all of your tv/movie metadata first. - I am just some rando but I think this poster may have meant tinymediamanager as opposed to tinymusicmanager. I use tinymediamanager and it’s great. 
 

