- 11 Posts
- 67 Comments
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•UK police chiefs call for ban on social media for under-16sEnglish12·9 days agoI thought they already did this in Australia
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Zuckerberg on the Stand: The Trial to Break Up Facebook Starts MondayEnglish4·9 days agoI thought it was ‘careless people’ he was scared of
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•[Solved] What just happened to 4 million posts?English561·9 days agoMaybe they unzipped the archive? /S
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Fediverse@lemmy.world•Why can't I block rule 34 community?English8·15 days agoThis sounds like a client problem. Modern Lemmy has community blocks as part of the insurance user profile. Have you tried web client or another app?
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•DNA testing firm 23andMe files for bankruptcyEnglish83·28 days agoSure, list five
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•FBI’s Biggest Office Reduced to One Job: Redacting Epstein FilesEnglish183·1 month agoI thought the onion only posted satirical or parody stories, not real news
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Freed At Last From Patents, Does Anyone Still Care About MP3?English2·2 months agoThis is what we were all told for years and years- that it was impossible that anyone could hear anything in vinyl that was supposed to be there but that couldn’t be reproduced with digital at cd quality. Then DVD came out And people could genuinely hear the difference from CD quality audio even in stereo. It turns out that dynamic range is limited by the audio sampling rate and the human ear can easily detect a far greater range CD audio supports.
Strictly speaking, you cannot make an ISO from an audio CD. Yes, you can make a bin cue file pair as another commenter has suggested. But realistically what you’ve then got is uncompressed wav audio with the metadata in separate files. The only real advantage this gives you is something that theoretically allows you to recreate precisely the original layout of the audio CD, together with the appropriate length of silence in between the tracks, etc.
When you convert to FLAC there is no loss in audio quality, you use approximately half of the storage space compared to wav, and you can have all of the metadata such as tags and art images embedded in the file itself.
Bin/cue is not really very useful unless you’re not listening directly from a computer or burning to a CD and listening to that. For every other use case, it’s better to have a file that you can play directly and index directly.
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Slaying over ‘prized samurai sword’ leaves 1 Portland brother dead, the other in prisonEnglish6·3 months agoA lot of ‘samurai swords’ in media are really just machetes frankly. The linked article describes
Gus Lawrence admitted to using his feet to bend his brother’s “prized samurai sword” into an L-shape while trying to break it, according to a bail memo.
Yeah it’s mall ninja kit.
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•CVS wants you using its mobile app to unlock store shelvesEnglish1·3 months agoWould it make a difference if they did? Here in the UK every supermarket has a loyalty card scheme. I held out for a long time but eventually I simply couldn’t afford to pay the effective 20% premium for not using it
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Only 1 in 10 Oracle Java users want to stay with Big RedEnglish6·3 months agoThere’s a large variety on Windows too, e.g. Temurin and Corretto are both available there
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Democrat teams up with movie industry to propose website-blocking lawEnglish91·3 months agoI’m missing the part where consumers are required to use their ISP DNS. I never do, in favour of CloudFlare DNS, Google DNS, etc
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•EU medicines agency quits X, moves to BlueskyEnglish51·3 months agoI wanted to leave Twitter too. I’m a professional engineer in tech and I found setting up in Mastodon to be… …not straightforward, as did a whole load of other people. I eventually got set up. I couldn’t find anyone or anything, the whole model being based around local instances rather than users or topics but… I tried to make the best of it and I followed the other people who had left Twitter that I had followed there when they said where to find them on Mastodon. Then I found I had run into a ‘silencing’ drama where some other instance admins had taken issue with an admin for the instance I was signed up to and as a result everyone on my instance was essentially shadowbanned in a whole load of other places. It had been happening maybe a month before I even found out about this. I’m a grown up, I don’t have time for school time drama. I found that I was using Mastodon less and less and so were the people I had been following. Then my BlueSky invite came through. I can find topics and I can find users. People post and people respond. I don’t have to worry which of 100 identical usernames across different instances is the ‘real’ one or my instance being defederated or silenced.
The problem with Mastodon is it’s basically a social network for people who are into Mastodon, and enjoy centering around their specific instance. It might work for Warcraft guilds but it doesn’t work for me, or any of the people or topics I want to follow, ostly current affairs and tech. As opposed to BlueSky which is a social network for people who:
- Want to move on from twitter
- Are interested in finding and following people and or topics
No doubt at this point you will want to tell me how I’m all wrong, clearly tech illiterate and how Mastodon has at least as many users as BlueSky. Sure, whatevs. It’s like Linux on the Desktop, not a viable mass-market proposition at this point (saying this with 25 years Linux desktop experience).
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•EU medicines agency quits X, moves to BlueskyEnglish61·3 months agoMastodon as a mass market solution has failed. It’s essentially irrelevant outside of a tiny niche
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Mark Zuckerberg says anyone who quits Meta is 'virtue signaling'English4·3 months agoSo what’s his laying off 5% of staff?
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Lenovo Makes Rollable OLED Screens a Laptop RealityEnglish3·3 months agoI fail to understand what disabilities this could help with
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Nearly a year since launch, Apple’s Vision Pro still searching for a killer appEnglish152·3 months agoFundamentally the only unique attribute for these goggles is 3D and that comes at a significant expense in terms of user experience. It’s the same story as it has been over the last two centuries.
Stereographic photos in the 19th century worked perfectly well but required a special headset and only one person could look at them at a time. Didn’t take off. People prefer to be able to look at two-dimensional photos perhaps casually and to be able to point the things to other people looking at the same photo or to compare it with other things at the same time.
3d movies in the 1950s required special red, blue or red green glasses. Didn’t take off beyond a gimmick. 3d movies could not be watched without the goggles.
3d movies in the theatre in the early 2000s. Didn’t really get beyond the gimmick level. Lots of people complain about headaches.
3d TVs in the early 2000s required special glasses and the 3D could not be used if other people were trying to watch without the glasses.
The conclusion I draw from this is that people don’t like having to wear special glasses or a device strapped to their face, even if it is relatively cheap to produce. Although 3D is nice, it simply doesn’t seem to be sufficient incentive to put up with the isolation from other people and the surrounding environment that the viewing equipment invariably requires.
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•'NATO Santa' shot down over Moscow in apparent Russian propaganda videoEnglish4·4 months agoI’m missing where Russian Santa’s presents are shown, he mostly seems to be involved in surprise pyrotechnics
SquiffSquiff@lemmy.worldto Not The Onion@lemmy.world•'NATO Santa' shot down over Moscow in apparent Russian propaganda videoEnglish60·4 months agoGiven the recent Azerbaijan airlines disaster this really is cartoon level evil.
The advantage with the Gripen is that the Americans can’t turn it off on a whim