add feature list to readme

This commit is contained in:
2026-05-21 01:14:05 +03:00
parent 7d64cd7388
commit e3ff024e61
+18
View File
@@ -28,6 +28,24 @@ Jellybloom is a ground-up desktop client for Windows. It talks directly to your
## 🎬 What it does
A few things worth calling out:
- Direct Jellyfin server connection with support for multiple servers and a live dashboard
- TMDB integration for metadata, backdrops, posters, logos, and the entire Discover section
- OpenSubtitles built into the player - search, download, and adjust style without leaving the video
- Sonarr and Radarr request buttons on every title page, with status tracking
- Trakt.tv scrobbling via device-code auth, no browser redirects
- Fanart.tv for high-quality artwork when Jellyfin or TMDB come up short
- Full ASS and SSA subtitle rendering through libass-wasm, plus SRT, WebVTT, and text
- Audio graph with compressor and parametric EQ, plus passthrough to your receiver
- Picture filters for brightness, contrast, saturation, hue, and gamma on badly-encoded files
- Virtualized poster grids that stay smooth with thousands of items
- Fuzzy search across titles, people, and collections with saved search history
- Watch diary with ratings, rewatch counts, notes, and export to Markdown, JSON, or Letterboxd CSV
- Bookmarks with notes, A-B looping, trickplay thumbnails, sleep timer, and a "still watching?" check
- SyncPlay groups and casting to other Jellyfin sessions on your network
- Fully rebindable keyboard shortcuts and full keyboard navigation throughout
### 📺 Browse
The home page is built from shelves you curate yourself, or you can let the app suggest rows based on what you actually watch. The poster grid uses virtualized scrolling so it stays smooth even with thousands of items. Right-click any poster for a quick look without losing your place. A notification bell tracks new episodes and movies, deduplicated by series so a full-season drop does not flood you. Search is fuzzy and unified across titles, people, and collections, and saved searches stick around if you find yourself looking for the same things repeatedly.