by monsieurpng on 4/25/22, 4:48 PM with 16 comments
by dont__panic on 4/25/22, 6:33 PM
Now, thanks to outages, an increasingly crappy app, and a conscious decision to constantly shove podcasts in my face (despite the fact that I am a paying customer for a music service), I've quit Spotify in 2022. At this point it's safe to say that I don't miss it at all.
Growth will be the death of the entire technology sector eventually. It erodes quality services, you can never rely on anything because they'll eventually be mined out for profit.
by adamomada on 4/25/22, 9:44 PM
Full polished web-apps to browse and select titles to download, automatically, which appear almost instantly in your plex/emby/jellyfin server, which give a superior UI for queuing up titles and tracking progress, that play on any and every device in your house. Full quality, (usually) the exact same bits, no DRM.
Here’s the killer - there is now a multitude of services that will do ALL of the above for you without having to lift a finger. They run the backend infra, put the media server on a 1 Gbps pipe in a datacenter, run a reverse proxy somewhere nearby that you have decent peering with, and it just works. If they have a large enough base of users, you hardly ever have to do the request step and just have a firehose of literally everything being released, plus the back catalogue of almost everything released on Bluray.
You basically have the dream of Netflix (aka Spotify for video) right now and it can cost as little as $10/mo. Share your media server just like your Netflix login with your friends and family even. It’ll spread just like that, and it’s impossible to compete against.
by EricE on 4/25/22, 5:22 PM
Or pushed people to complacency. Indeed, I think Hollywood and other streaming providers are overly flattering themselves if they think piracy is why their numbers are down - the vast majority of new content sucks. It lacks all storytelling, creativity or any other compelling reason to justify it’s consumption.
Indeed when you see sneering comments made about “fan service” that tells you all you need to know about the decline in numbers - and piracy isn’t the main reason.
Talk about copium…
by mindcrime on 4/25/22, 5:23 PM
by Quequau on 4/25/22, 5:49 PM
Also, I'd be interested to see more recent info.
by MiddleEndian on 4/25/22, 11:01 PM
by rolph on 4/25/22, 5:10 PM
"The content industry spent years trying to battle piracy via all manner of heavy handed-tactics and lawsuits, only to realize that offering users inexpensive, quality, legitimate services was the best solution. Many users flocked to these services because they provided a less-expensive, more flexible alternative to traditional cable. Now, if the industry isn’t careful, it could lose a sizeable chunk of this newfound audience back to piracy by making it overly expensive and cumbersome to access the content subscribers are looking for."
by davengh on 4/25/22, 6:40 PM