![]() I did this both with the instructions in the blog post and with the content of the two scripts downloaded by those instructions ‘twonky.sh’ and ‘twonkyserver-default.ini’ The main thing I did was to strip off every occurrence of /ffp wherever I saw it in a path eg: /ffp/opt/twonky/ became /opt/twonky/ Nevertheless – I followed the instructions, and with a few variations … got it to work … which surprised me! ![]() The only problem, is that all the instructions are for the lightweight ffp Linux install – rather than debiansqueeze which I’m using (because of the subversion project posted about previously). ![]() This post covers much of what needs to be done, providing a link to a build of Twonky for the ARM processor and instructions on how to configure. And promptly disabled it again.īut the word on the street, is that the Twonky Media Server is good, so I thought, put that on it.Īnd indeed people have put it on the DNS-320. Having got the NAS loaded with all my media files, I enabled the UPnP MediaServer that came with it – to discover it was total crap. I gave myself a bit of a shock today by working out something in Linux that actually worked, all by mself! Obviously to any proper linux person it’s little more than a child’s first steps – but it was quite satisfying!
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