• Gammelfisch@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    There was something called a rotary telephone and TV with an antenna. Children were typically used as the remote control to change the channel using a dial or buttons on the TV.

    • Hikermick@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Also kids being the first to run into the house and turn on the TV because it had to warm up. You needed to have it up and running before your show came on because if you missed it you weren’t gonna see it until reruns. Now it has occurred to me the term rerun is obsolete

      • Spice Hoarder@lemmy.zip
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        2 months ago

        The closest thing these days are reuploads.

        But it’s funny, no more sitting through a block of something you don’t like because your show is on next.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    2 months ago

    I still dont stream. I buy big hard drives and full them with stuff. :)

  • cobysev@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I cut all streaming services out of my life last year, except for Curiosity Stream, a sort of “Netflix” for educational documentaries.

    But I haven’t even been watching that in a while, so maybe I should stop paying for it.

    I just got sick of rising prices and invasive ads despite paying to avoid them. I use Plex now. I paid the one-time fee for the Lifetime Plex Pass and now I have access to all their advanced tools and streaming content, plus I can rip my movies/TV shows/music to my PC and stream them myself through Plex. No ads, no extra junk, no “are you still watching?” pop-ups. Just hit play and enjoy.

  • rose56@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    I guess people sit all day and stream stuff, because you cant do hobbies like dance, yoga, bicycle or anything else looool.

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      2 months ago

      Yeah most people dont have the energy for those things, but its by design. Work and family takes all your energy. And then they want you to watch tv so you can get served ads, or watch news so you feel small and afraid.

      • TheSeveralJourneysOfReemus@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        It is a fair assessment, for an early industrial society. I just think we live in the ear of informations, we have more of everything, which is not a good thining, in the end, but we do have more and more. At some point, you’d think that having easy access to information and entertainment would be great, and it is. But I might want to add more friction between me and the informstions, I might avoid further automations.

  • wuffah@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    A decent “no logs” VPN + thepiratebay.org, or Streamio + realdebrid has solved just about every media issue I’ve had.

    Most of the time it’s easier just to open Streamio than search through 8 apps for what I want to watch only to find it gated behind a $65/mo. add on subscription, or not at all.

    Mainstream app streaming has gotten worse, and open source streaming has gotten wildly easier.

    • eli@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Been self hosting my own content since Netflix removed King of the Hill. Cancelled my sub immediately.

      For the most part I was doing everything manually with a seedbox, SFTP, and then renaming things.

      Just scrapped that setup and did a docker environment with gluetun, qbit, and some *arr apps. Pretty good so far, some annoyances, but was a bit easier than I expected.

    • Echolynx@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      I get frustrated even trying to pay for a subscription, only to find that I’m being gatekept at 720p/1080p for deigning to use my browser on PC.

        • Casterial@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Kodi is dated and barely works and jellyfin lacks basic features. I have both jellyfin and plex, I prefer Plex but I have my own server with lifetime bought for $50

          • voidsignal@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            Well maybe. But I value the absence of needing any online service and hackability way more. Also for me, Kodi works perfectly. I have one on each TV, laptop, tablet, all synced. All I need is to open a torrent file from anywhere. But I admit, I have a hairy setup.

  • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Streaming music was available back in the 1970s. It consisted of you and your friends sitting on the floor with an AM radio and a portable cassette recorder and hoping the local station would play your song you wanted to hear and record. And IF your timing was right, you could get the whole song recorded. All so you could play it back on that cheap tinny sounding recorder. Such recordings were often used as a gift to your latest girl/boy friend with “Our Song” on it.

    • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Hmm. 1970 is a little early for a kid to have a portable cassette recorder. Transistor radios were just getting affordable enough to give a kid.

      • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        First, yes I’m bloody old. I had a small and cheap transistor radio mid/late the late 1960s. I got it for Christmas and I listened to it at night before I went to sleep. We had a much bigger multi-band transistor radio they kept in the kitchen that was a fancy one that was dual power. Batteries were expensive and often hard to afford as a kid. I do remember trying to make those batteries last as long as possible. Because we only went to town once a week sometimes even only twice a month. But the things I heard and learned about if the air was right and the am skip was good, and I could find those far distant stations was wondrous to a child.

        We did have a cassette tape recorder by 1972 at the latest. It wasn’t that me and my sisters each had a recorder, we just had the one for the whole family. And I can remember arguing about who got to use first-- me or my sisters. Kind of like the old RCA black and white tube TV. And most families had one. I can remember my Grandfather using it to record Polka and waltz music that he played and some voice stories of his early life. When he died in 1973 I was given a box of dozens of cassettes he had recorded telling those stories and him playing his banjo. Sadly he tapes have long since been worn out.

        Thanks for the memory prompt! Those times were often hard at the moment, but for each one of those there is an equally good memory of family and friends over shadowing them. You made my tea taste better this morning.

    • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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      2 months ago

      57 years ago (1969) meant the only tapes were audio (8-tracks, reel to reel, and some cassette tapes), and those were just starting to become popular because Dolby (released in '65) was slowly starting to be used during mastering to reduce tape hiss enough that they could be used for music.

      Betamax was released in '75, VHS in '76.

    • binarytobis@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      My grandpa recorded absolutely everything on VHS in the 90s. He had so many bookshelves full of movies and shows he meticulously catalogued. I wanted to ask him if he ever actually watched any of them, but I didn’t want to break his spirit.

      • atropa@piefed.social
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        2 months ago

        OK, thanks iam that old,  the years 70 and 80  where the best times to be around ,talk to your grandfather ,ask him everything about that time