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    • EatPotatoes [none/use name]
      hexbear
      18
      23 days ago

      Like this isn't a bad thing. Piracy is better for the planet. Physical media as a virtue campaigners are just tiresome lib dweebs when the problem has been as been solved twenty years ago.

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      • Chronicon [they/them]
        hexbear
        13
        23 days ago

        eh, physical media is cool and has advantages over digital collections sometimes. Eliminating it entirely means more things that fall through the cracks and never get archived. It will never again be the primary way most people consume media and that's for the best certainly, but eliminating physical media entirely is still a negative in my book, especially so long as piracy remains highly illegal.

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      • Yuritopiaposadism [none/use name]
        hexagon
        hexbear
        10
        23 days ago

        Piracy gives access but is not the silver bullet for preservation. Hard drives can and will fail. Cloud storage is largely dependent on whoever owns that server, and those can fail too overtime. Piracy works as long as people regularly maintain their digital collection, but some collections get lost and fall under the crack. Physical media preservation should be considered to be primary and piracy secondary as it is more to give people access.

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  • peppersky [he/him, any]
    hexbear
    19
    23 days ago

    if your goal is to keep people on netflix it's obviously against your interest to make your content available anywhere that isn't netflix.

    why sell someone a dvd box for 40 bucks if you can instead get money from them every month? i don't know how you can be in that industry and not understand this basic fact.

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  • Deadend [he/him]
    hexbear
    10
    23 days ago

    Netflix is weirdly against making money.

    But I’m guessing they have weird deals for rights that would require Netflix to spend more money to print discs.

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  • Abracadaniel [he/him]
    hexbear
    4
    23 days ago

    Streaming services, please use constant-quality, variable bit rade encoding for your media. Thank you.

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    • AlicePraxis [any]
      hexbear
      3
      23 days ago

      I think Max is pretty good with their encodes but yeesh, Netflix looks like trash. They also heavily de-grain everything shot on film to keep bitrates low so old movies look weirdly smooth and washed over with no fine detail.

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      • FloridaBoi [he/him]
        hexbear
        3
        22 days ago

        I can’t stand the audio mixing on so many movies. The dialogue is always so muddied or so low that I constantly have to adjust it. It’s especially worse with Dolby Atmos

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        • AlicePraxis [any]
          hexbear
          2
          22 days ago

          yeah that happens because movies are mastered for surround sound. these studios really should create professionally mastered stereo mixes for home releases since most people are gonna be using their TV's built in speakers. but usually they're too cheap to do that, so they just lazily down-mix to stereo and the levels sound like crap

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          • FloridaBoi [he/him]
            hexbear
            2
            22 days ago

            What’s funny is that most physical media often include a 2.0 audio mix. It may be something that has to be selected on Netflix if it is even an option.

            For me, I actually have an atmos capable system but I think Atmos is itself not very good and the mixing is extremely inconsistent. I’ve noticed that atmos on Netflix is especially bad even when I compare the same movie on disc

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      • Abracadaniel [he/him]
        hexbear
        2
        23 days ago

        Just watched Wonka (no comment) on Hulu and the image turned to shit when they popped confetti :pain:

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        • AlicePraxis [any]
          hexbear
          4
          23 days ago

          lol it's ironic that the parts of films that are supposed to be visually dazzling are what gets destroyed by compression. RIP to all the VFX artists working tirelessly on their fancy particle effects only for them to get turned to pixelated digital mush

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