thystifi

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] thystifi@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

For anyone interested, we've also got a Punk Rock Album Club discussion going on over at !punk_rock@lemmy.ca

 

Mods, let me know if this type of post isn't allowed.

Just wanted to invite anyone interested to join us on !punk_rock@lemmy.ca / lemmy.ca/c/punk_rock for the launch of our bi-weekly album club.

First album up for discussion is Mush by Leatherface. Released in 1991, this UK album sort of bridges the gap between the hardcore and post-hardcore of the 80s, and the poppier punk that would explode into the mainstream through the mid-90s.

[–] thystifi@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That sucks man! Lemmy in general seems to have quieted down a bit after the last wave of Reddit outrage. Reddit is fucking with tracking soon though, so that might mean another wave of new users.

[–] thystifi@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

I have a lot more indexers than that, and not much better luck. You really need a private torrent tracker if you want to automate books. Every few years I look into a way to automate it more like movies & TV with just usenet and public trackers, but every few years I don't turn up much. I have Readarr running, but it rarely finds anything except the most mainstream bestseller type results. Just doing things manually with something like Anna's Archive or Libgen is really the only thing that works well. Results for comics work better, but I can't stand Mylarr's interface, so have always just manually done that too when I have the urge.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/5800779

A community for all things punk rock. Favourite songs, reviews, news. Come discover some new music with us.

!punk_rock@lemmy.ca
https://lemmy.ca/c/punk_rock

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/5800779

A community for all things punk rock. Favourite songs, reviews, news. Come discover some new music with us.

!punk_rock@lemmy.ca
https://lemmy.ca/c/punk_rock

 

A community for all things punk rock. Favourite songs, reviews, news. Come discover some new music with us.

!punk_rock@lemmy.ca
https://lemmy.ca/c/punk_rock

1
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by thystifi@lemmy.ca to c/punk_rock@lemmy.ca
 

I've been thinking about this post for a while, ever since a similar one went up on the old Hardcore community on the now defunct waveform.social. Basically an introduction/why are we all here, and what's the point?

Why Punk_Rock?
Like many of you (I assume), I moved over to Lemmy after watching Reddit slowly (or sometimes rapidly) go to shit over the past decade+. From Front Page of the Internet to Digging it's own grave for that sweet ad revenue. I started this sub-lemmy for two main reasons:

  1. At the time, most of the other punk subs on Lemmy hadn't had new posts in half a year or more, and/or had almost no active members. I wanted to create a sub that was actually active and enticing to people during the great Reddit exodus(es).
  2. Most of the punk subs on Reddit were, well... boring. I mean, I get it, for some people listening to Teenage Bottlerocket on repeat for weeks on end has a certain comforting appeal. However, there's more out there in the big wide world than US Top 40 punk. Reddit has always been famous for headline readers, and it seemed more often than not, that's all the punk subs were too. Bad Religion or the Interupters get hundreds of upvotes in minutes, likely from people who don't even click through to listen to the music, but anything unfamiliar would get ignored, or worse, downvoted. That lead to a painfully repetitive catalogue. Some subs tried blacklists or posting guidelines, but it often didn't seem to make a big difference.

Rules? What do we need rules for?
That's not to say that you can't post Bad Religion or whatever else you like here. Feel free. I'd like to keep this place as rules-free as possible. I think, as a whole though, we can do better. What I was always looking for on Reddit was new music. Something I hadn't heard before. That's what I'm trying to do here. I want to help people find new favourite bands that rip as hard as what they're used to. That said, in this sad world we live in, basic ground rules almost always have to be stated:

  1. Don't be racist, sexist, homophobic, transphobic, etc. Basically just don't be a degenerate.

There, that was easy wasn't it?

A quick note about Spotify
Yeah, yeah, it's convenient. It's also absolute shit. Spotify is bad for artists, it's bad for listeners, it's bad for the internet. You know who Spotify is good for? Spotify shareholders and executives, that's about it.

That said, I obviously don't expect everyone to stop using it. Post Spotify links if you must, however there are better alternatives out there. One of the big ones is Bandcamp.com. Users get all the free streaming they want, there are apps in addition to the website, and most importantly, over 80% of the money, on average, goes directly to the artist or label putting out the music. That is why all of my posts (where possible) feature a Bandcamp link. Help support the artists you love whenever you can.

Holy fuck this is wordy
Yeah. Sorry about that. At the end of the day, I never really aspired to mod a community again, and I'm hoping the amount of actual moderation required remains minimal. If everyone sticks to the golden rule Just don't be a degenerate, we should be fine. So have fun, find new music, post news, scene updates, favourite songs, whatever you'd like (that's punk related), and hopefully we all come across new and exciting music along the way. Invite your friends, the more the merrier!

[–] thystifi@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

This is not entirely uncommon due to versioning. The network TV version might have aired in a different order from the later released DVD boxset, or the US version aired in a different order than the EU version, etc. Instead of refreshing metadata, try using the Identify option. Under each of the results it will show the source, so pick the one that matches the episode order you want.

[–] thystifi@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago

Spotify's model is basically how can we screw everyone, and keep the maximum for ourselves. Bandcamp is probably a better example, where artists actually get the bulk of the sales.

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