So you are not scraping any data about your TV series and movies then?
The.Real.Housewives.Of.NewJersey.S07E02.A.Very.Hairy.Christmas.WEBRip.x264-MEGAT… what else do you need?
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So you are not scraping any data about your TV series and movies then?
The.Real.Housewives.Of.NewJersey.S07E02.A.Very.Hairy.Christmas.WEBRip.x264-MEGAT… what else do you need?![]()
The.Real.Housewives.Of.NewJersey.S07E02.A.Very.Hairy.Christmas.WEBRip.x264-MEGAT… what else does Roux need?![]()
Kodi has all the right names and artwork for everything.
Kodi uses SQLite, an open source light-weight SQL database-engine, to store all its library related data (Music, Video, and Program databases). By default, the database files (*.db) are stored in The UserData Folder, specifically in userdata/Database.
In addition to indexing media files when activated by user-selected Content settings, Kodi also puts a video in its database if you change any OSD setting while watching it. Resume points are stored in this database as well. These entries are added to the database whether the affected video is part of the Video Library or not.
Databasess are automatically maintained whenever you use Kodi. You can activate the most powerful database functionality by setting the Content property on all of your media sources, and using Kodi Library Mode. This view mode allows you to browse your media based on the details available in the databases, rather than using simple folder and filenames for details. You can read more about Library Mode for Music and Video files on their respective pages.
Since Kodi maintains the databases on its own, the only time a developer really needs to access the databases is for display information.
Kodi is about watching content
VLC is a great player too. I used SQLite a few years ago and I love that is had no stront-procs and that referential constraints are not enforced. It's a glorified flat file and to me that is what a database should be. Kodi uses one, good for them. It has resume points - good for them. I tend to watch an episode in one go so it does not really bother me.
Plex seems to work better for people on ritalin, that have many TVs and fondleslabs and they only watch a few minutes at a time before the ADD kicks in and they do something else before resuming playback on a different device.
Ever think about how some houses have multiple people living in them and that they maybe don't want to watch the same thing at the same time in the same room?
Kodi… sounds like it's a way to overcomplicate a simple task.
/Not sure why everyone is wasting their time trying to convince this guy that Plex is sooooo much better...![]()
How many times must people point out that Plex does not always transcode. Enough. Walks away.