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9 votes
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Shawn Mendes - In My Blood - A creative and beautiful hand-drawn lyric video
2 votes -
Musicians?
Anyone play an instrument as a hobby? I'm currently learning how to play the violin I started about 2 weeks ago and really like it so far! I noticed my G string's fine tuner was not quite working...
Anyone play an instrument as a hobby?
I'm currently learning how to play the violin I started about 2 weeks ago and really like it so far!
I noticed my G string's fine tuner was not quite working so I removed tension off the string to fix the screw--when I re-added tension I ended up breaking my string. This gave me an excuse to buy some nice starter strings! I can't wait to start playing on them I'm still waiting a few hrs to let them "settle in" on their own.
7 votes -
The musical fusion of the Castlevania series
6 votes -
FC St Pauli: how it became the football team of punk and techno
2 votes -
YouTube faces paying billions to music stars after copyright vote
6 votes -
YouTube faces paying billions to music stars after copyright vote
1 vote -
'Shocking' level of sexual harassment at music festivals
12 votes -
Apple is starting a music publishing business. Huh?
4 votes -
I'm an indie gamedev. Here is 5 tracks from my game Rashtal.
5 tracks from my game Rashtal. Feedback would be appreciated. Playlist Or each song separately: Life in the Treetops; Song of the Forest; Through the Sunken Glades; The Canopy; The Forest Floor;...
5 tracks from my game Rashtal. Feedback would be appreciated.
Or each song separately:
The game is still in development. Just sharing some music to get feedback.
13 votes -
How would you theoretically go about mitigating the potential near-complete loss of archived audio and video media from 1990 to 2020?
This article from last year provides an alarming look into the woes that media preservation (specifically audio and video) is facing this century due to a content explosion that shows no signs of...
This article from last year provides an alarming look into the woes that media preservation (specifically audio and video) is facing this century due to a content explosion that shows no signs of slowing down. It’s not a new problem, as journalist Bill Holland showed nearly 20 years ago (warning, it’s a long read).
To summarize: In the past, many predecessors to existing media studios did a bad job of archiving their collections of recorded material. In some cases they actively destroyed or threw out parts of their catalogs to make way for new material. This wiped out portions of the available media to be preserved, especially the older stuff. Now that most studios have improved their archival practices though, their remaining catalogs are facing a new foe: Moore’s Law.
The problem with LTO (tapes) is obsolescence. Since the beginning, the technology has been on a Moore’s Law–like march that has resulted in a doubling in tape storage densities every 18 to 24 months. As each new generation of LTO comes to market, an older generation of LTO becomes obsolete… Already there have been seven generations of LTO in the 18 years of the product’s existence… Given the short period of backward compatibility — just two generations — an LTO-5 cartridge, which can still be read on an LTO-7 drive, won’t be readable on an LTO-8 drive. So even if that tape is still free from defects in 30 or 50 years, all those gigabytes or terabytes of data will be worthless if you don’t also have a drive upon which to play it.
If the worst case scenario were to happen, this is apparently what it would look like according to “a top technician at Technicolor”:
“There’s going to be a large dead period,” he told me, “from the late ’90s through 2020, where most media will be lost.”
But not everyone is that worried, the article also includes this counterpoint,
“Most of the archivists I spoke with remain — officially at least — optimistic that a good, sound, post-LTO solution will eventually emerge.”
/u/boredop and I have been discussing the implications of this in the thread they posted a few days ago about a John Coltrane release, and in the course of that discussion they provided that second link to Bill Holland’s multi-part investigation (thanks!).
So my question is this: What direct or indirect measures would you theoretically take to prevent or mitigate the loss of the vast majority of recorded media from 1990 to 2020? Should any measures be taken to preserve these cultural artifacts?
By direct measures I mean innovations to physical archiving or storage methods. By indirect measures I mean public awareness, strategies for choosing what to save, workarounds, etc.
23 votes -
My phone started to play the same thing my computer was when playing YouTube
Oddly all off a sudden, while I was watching a video, my phone started to play the same sound as my PC speakers. It was kinda of cool, like my phone was a second speaker. But it did it...
Oddly all off a sudden, while I was watching a video, my phone started to play the same sound as my PC speakers. It was kinda of cool, like my phone was a second speaker. But it did it automatically. Anyone else see this? I have access to YouTube music now so maybe that's a new feature or something?
edit: My device is Windows 10 PC using regular Chrome and Google Pixel XL (Android P)
7 votes -
What music do you listen to while reading?
What do you like to listen to while you're reading? Lately I've been listening to Explosions in the Sky, El Ten Eleven and Bonobo. I'm open to pretty much any genre, anyone have any suggestions?
7 votes -
I gotta say, this is describes my emotions about this song.
4 votes -
What game has your favorite soundtrack?
See title.
21 votes -
The Lil Tay saga reaches its logical conclusion
11 votes -
Tom Holland performs Rihanna's Umbrella (rain included)
3 votes -
The guy who produced Kendrick Lamar's best new track did it all on his iPhone
4 votes -
YouTube Music is Google's latest stab at a Spotify rival
8 votes -
Hammock - We Will Rise Again (2018)
4 votes -
Childish Gambino - This Is America is still #1 on YouTube Trending 5 days after dropping. 59M views.
The video, in case you haven't seen it yet. WaPo had an interesting breakdown a few days ago on most of the shots in the video and theories as to their meaning that is worth reading. However, one...
The video, in case you haven't seen it yet.
WaPo had an interesting breakdown a few days ago on most of the shots in the video and theories as to their meaning that is worth reading.
However, one thing I noticed they (and most other people so far) missed was that you can see Glover's back in the beginning since he is facing away from the camera and there is clearly no gun in his pockets or in his waistband... so it simply materializes when he reaches behind him after he slowly dances towards his first victim.
They also don't mention how during the third to last scene everyone screams and scatters even though he is only making a gun shape with his hands which, when contrast against the actual scenes of murder causing no reaction by anyone, says a lot.
I am also currently addicted to Reaction videos on YouTube of people watching the video for the first time. Peoples' initial shock and their different interpretations of the video are fascinating to watch. In one of them, someone even mentioned something nobody else seemed to notice... that after the first murder, the gun is carried away by someone else with an almost reverence while the body is simply dragged away like garbage and again after the second murder scene as well.
Anyone else notice any other interesting elements worth noting?
10 votes -
Spotify reports more paid users, continued losses
8 votes