I’m planning on getting some recertified Seagate Ironwolfs from SeverPartDeals very soon
It’s not just about the content posted by individuals though. The community and relationships built on a centralized platform are also at risk to a much greater degree than they would be on federated social media.
Well since nobody can name a tracker with any AV1 content, I will for anyone finding this post in the future.
As mentioned in the OP, LST.gg has an uploader, KIMJI, who encodes western cartoons, TV, and movies in 1080p AV1. I personally love the quality and file size of his encodes. There’s some other AV1 content there as well. Several WhiskeyJack encodes have been uploaded, although I don’t know where they originate.
I really wish I knew where to find anime in AV1 still.
I love KIMJI encodes.
Yea I’ve heard that grain synthesis can be tough to get right with AV1. I’ve seen people (that know much more than me) talk about ways to make it better though.
I think Av1an gets better results.
I do think that’s why people like it more for cartoons and anime.
Any release groups you see consistently?
I’m well aware of the tradeoffs. Besides, encodes of remuxes and full disks can easily be better quality than web-dls, and with av1 or HEVC can be smaller file size too.
How would you get through the install though? Are there any simple solutions without any graphics output?
What if I’ve never built a headless system and am afraid of not having easy access to a GUI?
MAM is a private torrent tracker with tons of ebooks. They definitely have a lot of magazines, but maybe not the most expansive collection around. They do interviews to join regularly.
Mastodon is easily the largest decentralized social network. Idk what you’re on about.
I’m inclined to agree. Like, I get it - the Debian maintainer used inflammatory language and the conversation devolved from there. I’d really love to see some real discussion about how the upstream devs can justify their claims that these features don’t increase the attack surface. I also understand that they don’t want their bug tracker filled with Debian specific issues because of this, but can we not also have a discussion about the desire for people to have a stripped down version?
I for one wasn’t even aware that my offline password manager has networking features at all.
Edit because I’m kind of hot on this right now:
In the HN and github discussions I’m seeing a lot of people asking if there are any known vulnerabilities in the removed code or demonstrated exploits, and the notion that you’d need these things to exist before reducing the attack surface is so off base IMO. The point of reducing the attack surface is to prevent unknown attacks. If there were known attacks they would simply be patched out. This is preventative not reactive, which is far better.
The upstream dev constantly bringing up how well reviewed the code is and how careful they are about adding new features doesn’t change the fact that not everyone will want the increased risk of having those features. Even if that risk is miniscule, it can never be 0. A truely offline password manager brings that risk much much closer to 0 though.
Thanks for the response! I’ve had my eye on these Onn devices for a while but haven’t looked into any of that stuff yet. I need to replace this old pi3 soon though because I’m tired of dealing with it not decoding h265. The new Onn ones even support AV1 from what I’ve heard.
Has anyone done a deep dive to know for sure that it isn’t full of spyware and bloat? I’m weary of anything I can’t flash a new OS to. Or maybe they can be loaded up with a different community maintained OS?
That link just takes me to a kbin login page.
This guy really thinks watch parties and listening to music with friends over is illegal or unethical or some shit.
He’s referring to Threads
Love everything from Brad Neely but haven’t been able to find this since reading about it several months ago. Thanks for reminding me I’ll have another look.
That makes total sense from a corporate perspective. Maybe I would just love to be the one the pushes us a little bit closer to the enduser having control of their data and hardware. Its probably a pipe dream though lol.