@admiralwonderboat@mastodon.social among other places

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Jen is loading DVD’s into a donation box. Admiral: Stop!! You can’t get rid of our DVD’s! What if the streaming sites go down?! - Admiral: What’ll we watch if there’s an apocalypse? The NEWS?! Jen: You’re right! DVD’s are essential for survival! - Admiral: We still have a DVD player, right? Jen: I mean… probably

    • Flax
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      176 days ago

      I literally have a salvaged disk drive from an old computer connected up to a SATA adapter. Lol.

      • @Dragonstaff@leminal.space
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        76 days ago

        I do too. I haven’t used it in about 10 years, and this is at least the fourth computer it has been in. Maybe I don’t need it anymore, but if I throw it away, then I’ll surely have to read a DVD.

    • Lorem Ipsum dolor sit amet
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      16 days ago

      I have two 5 1/4" drives in a PC, one doing Bluray XL and the other Bluray and HD-DVD (altough I couldn’t test that feature because nothing supports them anymore and a lot of HD-DVDs are dead from disc rot)

  • @bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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    6 days ago

    Rip your DVDs.

    You can even just straight rip them to .iso and enjoy full quality with menus and all. I think Jellyfin supports that at least.

      • @Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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        65 days ago

        Libraries are awesome. Also, I think a lot of people don’t realize that DVDs are pretty good quality. They’re used to YouTube 480p, with the bitrate of a slug and heavy artifacts that have been converted 20 times to different formats. Actual 480p ripped directly from a DVD is pretty damn good.

        The ripping of your personal DVDs and libraries also having DVDs is just a coincidence, of course.

    • FundMECFS
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      35 days ago

      and feel free to share the rarer ones with the torrent community

  • @Ptsf@lemmy.world
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    75 days ago

    Something that people are missing with the whole physical media situation is that it being physical does not preclude it from internet connected DRM, server requirements, etc. It just so happens that around the turn of this century DVDs came along and lacked sophisticated/connected DRM implementations, but it is not inherent to their physical nature. Physical media also decays. DVDs generally have around 20-25 years before bitrot starts to set in. I love the concept, but you’re better served by a hard drive than a DVD.

      • @Ptsf@lemmy.world
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        25 days ago

        It depends on the drive and the type of drive, but generally they actually start to suffer bit rot after 6-12 months if they’re left without power at all. DVDs also suffer from bit-rot on short time scales, especially if stored improperly. Also migrating data or having a copy of it on a hard drive is easy, copying DVDs is legally gray, difficult, and they really only make sense as a delivery vehicle for the file to a drive or tape (if you prefer something genuinely long-term storage ready).

  • Pika
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    156 days ago

    Yeah, DVD players and Blu-ray players are going the way of the VHS player. It’s becoming increasingly difficult to find one that isn’t super locked down by some form of DRM and just works.

    And if you’re trying to find one for computers, forget about it. You spend an arm and a leg trying to find anything that isn’t just your typical DVD only, no Blu-ray or 4K. Blu-ray is a little more pricey, but any type of actual 4K player for computers, you’re spending $$$ unless you’re willing to try to patch it with a custom firmware.

    • @cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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      126 days ago

      The software that can legally play a UHD bluray doesn’t even work with modern CPUs since it requires the SGX instructions. You have to get a specific drive that’s not made anymore, flash it with custom firmware and rip the movie with MakeMKV.

    • @MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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      5 days ago

      $80 for Verbatim Slimline Blu-ray half a year ago, now $95 and the internal player changed, not LibreDrive ootb anymore, but still flashable.

  • @atlien51@lemm.ee
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    76 days ago

    Bruh shut with the DVD player. Literally anything can play a dvd; pc, laptop, Xbox, PlayStation…

    • Ricky Rigatoni
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      56 days ago

      Those don’t come with disc drives anymore unless you’re willing to pay extra.

      • @atlien51@lemm.ee
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        -25 days ago

        Bro.

        Not everyone has ps5/xbox series x, the discless version .

        Plenty of people have ps4/xbox series x (disc version), xbox one, Xbox 360/ps3 in the attic somewhere, an old laptop/desktop…need I go on?

          • @atlien51@lemm.ee
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            05 days ago

            Yeah. I’m not tryina account for every single person on earth. I’m just saying chances are you have at least 1 of those devices for a lot of ppl

        • @5too@lemmy.world
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          25 days ago

          My last few laptops haven’t had one either. And I’ve been seeing fewer options for DVD players when I build a new PC, I suspect they’re going absent there as well.

  • @CustardFist@feddit.nl
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    55 days ago

    Well, a good hoarder/prepper always keep a nice stack of DVD players and VCRs in their underground bunker. 🙃

    • @andros_rex@lemmy.world
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      46 days ago

      I picked up a season 1 Metalocalypse from a thrift shop and it was dead. It’s such a gamble. Goodwill is getting really precious on their DVDs too - only really good deals if you find a season/box set that they haven’t broken up.

      VHS seems more dependable, and VHS is dirt cheap. I got a pre-special edition Star Wars box set for $5, I got a season of MASH and Sergio Leone’s Dollars trilogy for $1 each. Lots of my local shops have $0.49 VHS bins.

      Finding a VHS player can be a challenge. DVD players are super available, but I spent a month or so hunting for my current player. (The rewinders though - everywhere.)

      Vinyl can also be found for pennies, but most of the good stuff is picked up quickly. If you are okay with mid jazz, classical music, and “greatest hits” compilations, the vinyl stacks are good to poke through.

      I do like that all of my analog media is mine. No worries about it being pulled from streaming or altered or copyright weirdness - I can go back to 1998 and watch my Star Wars.

        • @andros_rex@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          Decreased video quality is an improvement over the nothing at all that one gets from failed optical media though.

          I do have a ripper device - wanting to get into archiving rare media but Windows 11 in all of its glory has decided that it doesn’t trust me enough to let me choose to install third party drivers 🙄

          The ideal is a mix - but also, as a certified broke bitch I’ll take a 49 tape with ghosting issues over a $3.09 shiny thing that isn’t even a good paperweight if it’s dead.

  • @rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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    86 days ago

    If only physical digital media would actually last “forever” … I think magnetic harddrives that aren’t in constant use actually have the most longevity of common digital mediums.

  • @slaacaa@lemmy.world
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    66 days ago

    That’s why a PS5 (or another console) is very useful. Sometimes a movie is not available on any streaming, so I get it it cheaply on blu ray or dvd to watch it. We don’t have any other disc player in the house, despite having a few laptops.

  • Bubs
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    35 days ago

    Everyone arguing over DVD players or ripping discs and I’m like “Ooooo! M.A.S.H. collection!”