credo@lemmy.world
on 03 Jun 2024 13:14
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I’m still sullen about napster. It didn’t change anything about music sharing- other than to take music sharing into the spotlight. I.e., they got greedy and gained the attention of the media.
Using Napster was one of those defining childhood memories for me. I was in junior high when it came out and I remember hearing about it through rumors at school. It was one of my early memories, realizing that computers could be used for interesting things and not just office work.
Those were the days, spending 20 minutes downloading a 3 minute song over dialup.
wreckedcarzz@lemmy.world
on 04 Jun 2024 00:09
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interesting things and not just office work
I dunno about you, but at a younger age I was definitely into, uh, “interesting things” on the computer. And games, too.
(porn, I’m talking about porn)
Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world
on 03 Jun 2024 14:58
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Certainly soured a lot of people on Metallica.
shalafi@lemmy.world
on 03 Jun 2024 16:59
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Speculater@lemmy.world
on 03 Jun 2024 17:16
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I fucking love metal, but on principle will never listen to, buy, or support Metallica in any way ever. I also pass this to younger generations. I was a poor kid without a way to listen to music outside an FM radio, but this badass “thrash metal” band wanted me to pay what I didn’t have so I could listen to them.
So as a well off adult my vinyl collection grows without them.
nullPointer@programming.dev
on 03 Jun 2024 19:55
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to add to that, Metallica owes their existence to bootlegs.
Farmfixit@lemmy.world
on 03 Jun 2024 16:23
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Then Apple came with ipod and screwed up all my music with iTunes encrypting everything. Fuck apple forever
I argue that the real credit goes to Winamp. Napster was effectively just a slightly easier front end than an irc fserve, it was really the mp3 playback with playlists and maybe even milkdrop visualization that led to a critical mass for mp3 adoption and sharing. That later led to Napster and, ultimately, bit torrent.
threaded - newest
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Napster, a free, online music-sharing platform was created 25 years ago.
It didn’t last long, but we look at how it made lasting changes to the way we consume music.
The original article contains 30 words, the summary contains 30 words. Saved 0%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
⭐ You tried
Well, it covered every point from the article. So that’s good.
Lossless compression.
Or a zip file that unzips to the same size
That’s lossless…
I lost time waiting for it to decompress
Or a file that zips to the same size
It’s the new new internet
… laconic.
I’m still sullen about napster. It didn’t change anything about music sharing- other than to take music sharing into the spotlight. I.e., they got greedy and gained the attention of the media.
Using Napster was one of those defining childhood memories for me. I was in junior high when it came out and I remember hearing about it through rumors at school. It was one of my early memories, realizing that computers could be used for interesting things and not just office work.
Those were the days, spending 20 minutes downloading a 3 minute song over dialup.
I dunno about you, but at a younger age I was definitely into, uh, “interesting things” on the computer. And games, too.
(porn, I’m talking about porn)
Certainly soured a lot of people on Metallica.
Napster BAD!!! Fire BAD!!!
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
Napster BAD!!! Fire BAD!!!
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
I fucking love metal, but on principle will never listen to, buy, or support Metallica in any way ever. I also pass this to younger generations. I was a poor kid without a way to listen to music outside an FM radio, but this badass “thrash metal” band wanted me to pay what I didn’t have so I could listen to them.
So as a well off adult my vinyl collection grows without them.
to add to that, Metallica owes their existence to bootlegs.
Then Apple came with ipod and screwed up all my music with iTunes encrypting everything. Fuck apple forever
I just imported my CDs and online downloads from sources other than the iTunes Store (they were legal, I swear).
Honestly I liked my iPod.
I replaced the firmware on my iPod so I could just load songs on mass storage like a regular mp3 player
Let me guess, RockBox?
Yes, I couldn’t remember the name, thanks!
Don’t thank me, thank DankPods.
A quarter century of shameless piracy! Now that’s something to celebrate!
I was in college so…I’m old.
I argue that the real credit goes to Winamp. Napster was effectively just a slightly easier front end than an irc fserve, it was really the mp3 playback with playlists and maybe even milkdrop visualization that led to a critical mass for mp3 adoption and sharing. That later led to Napster and, ultimately, bit torrent.
But also, yeah, fuck Metallica.