GTG3000

joined 1 year ago
[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Oh, I know the experience pretty well. The fun fun fun of having something stuck at 98% for a week or more :D

I was thinking, if the creator themselves would seed their stuff it could work - although I admit it'd have to have some kind of seed schedule and maybe some heuristic to see which videos were still available or not. There'd be problems with bandwidth, but I think it would at least allow a decentralised video network to exist, even if it would feel a bit more like watching anime in year 2010.

And yeah, fair point. I don't really do live streams so I didn't think about them. Honestly don't know what a solution for that even could be, in terms of "everyone hosts a little bit to spread the load and price".

Don't really think it'd be that big of a mess for premiers, but then again I don't see a big issue in waiting a day to get good content. Y'all are spoiled with cdns and social media /s :D! In my experience torrents propagate pretty quickly so it could still work. Think the bigger issue would be the fact that people have preference for different resolutions, so you'd end up with massive torrent downloads that have 4k, 2k, 1080p, 720p, etc. Or multiple torrent files for different resolution. The worst outcome would of course be "creator just dumps 8k 60fps content on the network and tells you good luck".

Either way, I won't pretend like torrent net could match the service of youtube right now - but I do think it could actually make a video network actually work, without prohibitive costs for the hosters and subscriptions for the basic users. It'd still be nice to support creators and the trackers but those aren't as big of an ask as "host hundreds of 4k videos per creator forever".

[edit] as a last minute thought - I think I know another reason why torrents may not work so well. You'd have to have an app or a browser extension to use them, which limits the accessibility compared to "open url and watch".

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago (2 children)

I feel like the true decentralised approach to video that may work... Are torrents. Don't know if PeerTube works that way, but if you're allowing people to eat your bandwidth with direct streaming, you're gonna run into problems sooner or later.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 7 points 5 months ago

Yeah, same. I think it's because avatar will have some level of desync with the audio.

...or blink one eye after another or wink randomly.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 18 points 5 months ago (1 children)

I mean, I clearly remember firefox being terrible back when Chrome was just beginning to take off.

It was a lumbering monolith that ate all your ram and loaded pages at a glacial pace. Chrome was a multi-process revolution from that.

Then, firefox got it's shit together and chrome got overloaded with corpo bullshit.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 7 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Yeah, I find firefox tends to leak memory when you have youtube tabs open. Still using only firefox unless testing for compatibility but it is a thing.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 1 points 5 months ago

My anecdoral experience, although I was probably exagerrating a bit.

Still, if I take a break from twitter/bsky/cohost/spoutible/whatever for a month, I don't come back to "we decided this account is banned now and you can't get it back, have fun". Lost three mastodon accounts like that before I just gave up.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev -1 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Because there isn't a good replacement. Mastodon is a mess with no reach and servers that will perma-ban you if you don't post for a week, bsky is still kinda tiny, spoutible feels like "all politics all the time", cohost is jank.

Nobody really left Twitter because Twitter is where everyone else is.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 22 points 6 months ago

Ah, Midnight Commander, how have I missed you.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 10 points 7 months ago

Not to lump everything into one pile, but there's definitely some problems with movie planning nowadays.

That's what is pointed out in all those "this movie production literally sacrificed ten VFX studios on a mayan altar" documentaries - some of new directors don't plan shots ahead, require seeing the result and then re-doing it ad nauseam, and as a result waste WAY more vfx team effort and don't get good scenes.

Setting up visual storytelling and using good cinematography is hard - which is why to a lot of people the 3D movies like Spiderverse/Last Wish/Nimona stand out so much, you kinda have to plan ahead for a 3D movie, and even if you don't modifying a scene is easier (if you do it early enough in production).

I'd imagine that it's similar for writing - large monologues like that are probably the outcome of the writing team needing to put all they mean to onto the paper. Maybe also result of focus-testing being passed down directly to writing staff?

I don't know, I'm just a random guy on the internet but those are my two cents.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 1 points 9 months ago

It's cheap to print cards, and they're very shelf-stable.

This industry will take a long while to realize it's dead, if it dies.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 1 points 10 months ago

Yeah, the sole reason I don't have linux on my old laptop is that lenovo has completely proprietary video drivers for it. I'm talking "manufacturer's installers don't think there's a video card there" proprietary.

[–] GTG3000@programming.dev 11 points 10 months ago

Think there also was a big switch from torrenting to using the online streaming sites. Wonder if that's affecting the count.

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