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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: January 7th, 2024

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  • Spotify instantly gives you what the record companies paid for the algorithm to give you.

    “Digging” isn’t hard. Give it a go.

    But it sounds like you’re listed to “tracks” not albums. Frankly that’s your biggest mistake.

    If you like lots of tracks other people don’t, you’ll always be struggling against an algorithm trying to feed you 3 minute songs nobody hates.

    Listen to albums and every time you follow a rabbit hole you’ll have 40-80 minutes of music to listen to at least once, multiple times if it’s good.

    You’ll find albums that are worth listening to as a whole and some you’ll keep tracks in playlists.

    Personally I moved from CDs to Spotify to YouTube music, to buying CDs again, soon to have them on Jellyfin.

    Once you get into actually listening to albums, 3 or 4 albums from eBay or charity shops are what I’d have paid for a subscription and if I need to take a break I’ve still got my old music and don’t have any more to pay.

    You can of course sail the high seas if you’re strapped for cash or want things instantly. I consider the big 3 labels harmful and have only bought second hand copies. I try to buy from independents and smaller labels when I can directly.

    The harm of the major labels is pretty big and frankly streaming has become their most harmful tool. I want to avoid supporting that model or supporting the big 3.



  • Ross_audiotoNewsMassive Attack to take all songs off Spotify
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    2 months ago
    1. Talk to other human beings about music.

    Music is not meant to be a solitary hobby. Share what you like, they’ll share what they like.

    1. Like a piece of music? Look up that producer, or record label if it’s small. Look up the session musicians. Don’t just look up the artist.

    Generally it’s not just the artist that makes the music top tier. There are other great professionals involved in the background and good people hire other good people to work in the background.

    This is easy. Once you start doing this you end up with a queue of albums you want to get round to listening to. It’s easy enough to find too much music yourself without an algorithm. You start finding the artist radio a waste of your time.

    The rabbit holes I’ve been down following a producer, guitarist, or bassist, etc. are usually very rewarding and often you pop up in another place you knew already after finding out about some lesser known great music on the way.


  • Some ideas are considered too stupid to legislate against before someone does the stupid thing.

    The world continues for a few centuries without them and then suddenly there are warning labels to “not to operate heavy machinery” on bottles of sleeping pills.

    Door handles that don’t work in an emergency are the engineering equivalent.

    It’s easy to make a door handle that always works, it takes effort to make a door handle that sometimes works. It’s a special kind of stupid.

    I can’t imagine how bad a Tesla would be without the legislation in place to force their hand and make them safe. This problem slipped through the net.




  • Ross_audiotoPrivacy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    Hands appear differently in different positions all over the frame in the photo so I maintain the hand pattern is less consistent and harder than lens blur.

    But you’re right as the blur is a fingerprint you can match it to a lens and prove a photo is real that way.

    It could be a useful tactic as much of AI detection is a way to find and prove AI fake so far.


  • Ross_audiotoPrivacy@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    Just my guess. I could be wrong:

    As the lens blur is mathematically fairly simple and spread across the whole image it’s likely already consistently replicated by AI in a similar way to real photos.

    It’s easier for generative AI to spot, “understand”, and replicate a mathematical pattern than the number of fingers on a hand or limbs on a body.





  • Because Biden paid them with grants to build in the US. It’s that simple.

    Beyond that there’s stability and the likelihood of not being invaded or facing natural disasters.

    There’s meant to be government, legal, and financial institution stability too.

    As well as intellectual property defense, trade secrets and NDAs.

    Material supplies are meant to be stable too.

    When you’re investing in something as specialised as chip manufacturing, labour is a fraction of your concern. Both short and long term.



  • Retired people don’t need jobs.

    This is evidence of the chilling effect on protests of these fascist laws.

    If I get arrested on false “terrorist charges” I probably lose me job. If not that I’ll never get promoted.

    Even if I’m willing to take the social cost of publicly protesting against the genocide, I genuinely can’t afford the financial cost.

    A sacrifice that puts me back into poverty might be a moral choice I should make but it’s not one I will.

    Those on the bottom rung financially, or the top rung, have less to lose than anyone in the middle of working age.



  • Ross_audiotoTechnology*Permanently Deleted*
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    5 months ago

    “For the amount of space it takes to include a second speaker or second camera it doesn’t really make sense when you can just plug in an external one”

    You sound like an idiot.

    I can buy a phone from HMD that’s more repairable, more modular, and has sustainable features.

    Fairphone has been a busted flush since they ditched the headphone jack. It’s just the most obvious sign amongst many they started making landfill phones.


  • Ross_audiotoPolitical MemesAGAIN
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    5 months ago

    You got to benefit from the 80s and selling off of all our national assets to prop up our economy for 2 decade’s

    You lived in the good times and called it “the cold war”.

    From a millennial give us our stuff back (to the state who gave it to you).