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20 votes
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Crunchyroll announces the removal of its comment section across all platforms to 'reduce harmful content'
49 votes -
Inside Netflix’s bet on advanced video encoding
30 votes -
Introducing the Twitch DJ Program
10 votes -
Nebula strikes deal with Spotify to stream video content
38 votes -
Spotify raises US prices of premium streaming plans for second time in one year
33 votes -
Spotify hikes fees, passing on its tax burden, after the French government introduced a levy to support the nation's music industry
21 votes -
Studio musicians are still waiting for credit in the streaming era
22 votes -
Computer scientists invent an efficient new way to count
25 votes -
Is Nebula worth it?
Is anyone here using https://nebula.tv? Multiple creators I watch are on there, and I'm considering getting a subscription, but I'm just not sure if it's really worth it. Most channels on there...
Is anyone here using https://nebula.tv? Multiple creators I watch are on there, and I'm considering getting a subscription, but I'm just not sure if it's really worth it. Most channels on there don't seem to upload any exclusive content, so I'll basically just get the same videos but for $5/month instead of for free. I've also heard that the app and UX isn't that great.
People who use the service, what makes it worth it for you? Is it just a way to support the creators more?
61 votes -
The downfall of streaming
4 votes -
Apple, Netflix Amazon want to change how they pay Hollywood stars
13 votes -
In streaming milestone, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery team on bundle featuring Disney+, Hulu and Max
22 votes -
Musi’s free music streaming app is a hit with thrifty teens. The app claims to tap content on YouTube, but some in the music industry question the legitimacy of that model.
18 votes -
‘Snowpiercer’ season 4 moves to AMC after being scrapped at TNT
10 votes -
The comfortable problem of mid TV
24 votes -
Into the Tubi-verse
13 votes -
Spotify lowers artist royalties despite subscription price hike
50 votes -
Showtime app shutting down at the end of April
6 votes -
How ‘Monkey Man’ went from Netflix roadkill to Universal’s theatrical event
8 votes -
The film fans who refuse to surrender to streaming
24 votes -
Facebook let Netflix see user DMs, quit streaming to keep Netflix happy
37 votes -
Johan Röhr's 2,700 songs have been streamed 15bn times – Swedish composer becomes Spotify's most-famous musician you've never heard of
8 votes -
Can Sweden keep its edge in the music industry? Stockholm has spawned both some of the world's most successful musicians and music tech companies.
6 votes -
EU fines Apple €1.8bn over App Store restrictions on music streaming
26 votes -
Danish man on trial over accusations he fraudulently made more than £502,000 in royalties on music streaming sites
9 votes -
The ‘Road House’ reboot battle: A contested streaming deal, Ari Emanuel’s ‘desperate’ pleas and a director going scorched-earth
2 votes -
Lovebyte Party is LIVE! - Sizecoding compo with 8 bytes to 1k demos
4 votes -
Sam Reich on revamping the game show - and Dropout's success as a small streamer
27 votes -
Warner, Fox, Disney to launch streaming sports joint venture
6 votes -
Spotify has signed a new multiyear agreement with Joe Rogan, the host of one of the most popular and polarizing podcasts in the US
36 votes -
How to watch Super Bowl 2024: All the best streaming options
10 votes -
Piracy is surging again because streaming execs ignored the lessons of the past
136 votes -
Amazon Prime Video will start showing ads on January 29th
102 votes -
ESPN launches “ESPN 8: The Ocho” as a 24/7 FAST Channel on ABC.com
19 votes -
How Nebula works
49 votes -
Warner Bros. Discovery in talks to merge with Paramount Global
20 votes -
Spotify's push into audiobooks sparks concern among authors
13 votes -
Building a home media server on a budget
Hi I figured before I start venturing into other forums dedicated to this sort of thing, I'd ask here on Tildes since I'm at least comfortable with the community and how helpful they can be here....
Hi
I figured before I start venturing into other forums dedicated to this sort of thing, I'd ask here on Tildes since I'm at least comfortable with the community and how helpful they can be here.
I'm tired of all of the subscription services I have, movies and TV shows disappearing from them, buying a film on Prime and only being able to watch it offline through a specific app. Even then, half the time we're watching comfort TV shows that we have on DVD already (X-Files and Friends for instance).
So I figured that building a home media server would give me the chance to cut the cord with a couple of these services and allow us to start using and controlling our own data again.
I have a budget of around £300 (I could perhaps push to £400 if needed) and I'm honestly not sure at all where to start. I have knowledge on how to build brand new, medium to high end gaming PCs as I've done it since I was in my late teens and built my first PC with the wages from my very first job but building a budget minded PC for use as a home media server goes completely over my head.
I've noticed that a lot of the pre-built NAS or media server boxes are very expensive so my first thought was to buy a refurbed workstation or small form factor PC that has enough "oomph" to do the trick but I don't know what ones to even start looking at and then I start to feel a little bit out of my comfort zone.
Things like getting the right CPU in these refurbed machines that offers the features I'm looking for like hardware transcoding etc., integrated GPU's, ensuring there's enough SATA ports for multiple hard drives and an SSD for a boot drive, and then to top it all off ensuring that while achieving these features the thing shouldn't draw too much power when idling as it'll be on for long stretches of time, if not left on 24/7.
I've also got no knowledge of Linux, I've never even looked at it but if it's genuinely easy enough (for someone with next to no Linux experience) then I'd be happy to give it a shot if it offers better performance compared to using Windows 10 or something.
All the server will be used for is watching TV shows, perhaps the odd film, listening to a bit of music perhaps and the odd podcast now and again. Simultaneous streaming will be fairly minimal, perhaps 2 streams as me or my partner watch one thing and our daughter watches another on her tablet. In regards to streaming outside the house that will also be almost non-existent, perhaps, again our daughter watching a kids TV show like Pokemon or Fireman Sam on her tablet when we're out but me and my partner don't tend to watch anything when we're outside the house, certainly not TV shows or movies anyway.
Redundancy isn't something I'm too horrendously worried about, I wouldn't be storing anything like photos that we wouldn't want to lose on it and while it'd be annoying, losing a drive with TV shows or films on it wouldn't be the end of the world.
Any help would be massively appreciated, thanks.
36 votes -
Spotify cancels industry-favorite podcasts Heavyweight and Stolen
18 votes -
Spotify is the world's biggest music streamer but rarely turns a profit and just cut 17% of its workforce – its business model looks increasingly precarious
59 votes -
Netflix and Apple open door to bundling with streaming rivals
18 votes -
Early on-demand music streaming required lots of nickels
2 votes -
Nebula reopens lifetime subscriptions for $300 USD
19 votes -
It sure looks like a hacking campaign messed up people's Spotify Wrapped
39 votes -
Disney+, Hulu merged app to launch next month, Bob Iger says
24 votes -
NASA to launch NASA+, a free streaming service
73 votes -
Spotify has added audiobooks to its subscription model – reaching millions of people, it may revolutionise the already booming audiobooks business
38 votes -
Presenting a new (old) way to solve the "album problem" when streaming music
The "album problem" is, of course, the fact that our music listening habits have changed over the past decade and the value of a well-thought-out album is not nearly what it once was. This is in...
The "album problem" is, of course, the fact that our music listening habits have changed over the past decade and the value of a well-thought-out album is not nearly what it once was. This is in large part due to the fact that it's easy for people to create playlists with a billion different songs to choose from, recommendation algorithms, "Discovery Weekly" playlists, and whatever else the streaming services can throw at us.
I may not speak for all of us, but I've personally not been able to fully consume a new album for quite a while now, finding that I gravitate toward a few songs/singles that get dumped into a separate playlist. I don't like this and I miss the days that I would discover deep cuts in the back of an album that I listened to ad nauseum.
I present to you the "Six Disc Changer" playlist. The rules are simple:
- Create a new playlist in Spotify, Tidal, or your chosen platform. Call it "Six Disc Changer"
- Add six FULL albums to the playlist
- Force yourself to listen to the playlist -- maybe not exclusively -- but a fair amount. Imagine you're driving around in your 2002 Honda Civic and the only music available to you is what you've got in your CD changer.
- Any time you want to add a new album, you must remove an old album. You should only have six CDs loaded up at any time.
If you want to take the concept a few steps further...
- Any time you remove a CD, add it to a separate playlist called "CD Catalogue".
- Any time you want to add a new CD to the catalogue, you must "purchase" it with an "allowance" of your choosing. I'm going with 1 new album per week. You can swap out albums from your Catalogue playlist freely, but new albums must be "purchased." This will simulate scarcity, which was a large part of what drove us to listen to albums over and over again.
But... why?
My goal is to get back to listening to full albums and truly taking them in. The best way I can think of to do that is to simulate the way things used to be. By using a streaming service instead of, say, just going back to CDs or records, you get the benefits of convenience, Last.fm, easy Bluetooth, etc.
As for what's in my CD changer right now, I've got:
- Sufjan Stevens - Javelin
- The Antlers - Need Nothing
- Talking Heads - Speaking in Tongues
- Refused - The Shape of Punk to Come
- George Harrison - Living in the Material World
- Bob Moses - Battle Lines
Is it dumb? Probably. It's been fun so far and my music listening experience has been much more focused.
25 votes -
Spotify doesn't care about musicians
13 votes