Asking mostly because I have fuckloads of video courses, plus a number of movies, that I have yet to even check if the content is as good as their titles imply and I really feel like I’m mostly hoarding this stuff because I have no fucking clue.

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    I do not avoid hoarding.

    I’m like a dragon with a media treasure stored in high capacity industrial HDDs.

    Someday the age of pirates may come to an end, and I want to be prepared.

    • GeekFTW@lemmy.zip
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      2 months ago

      Same. I’m a Doctor Who fan. I don’t need to learn lessons twice. My grandchildren will be able to watch the dumb shit I grew up with one way or another!

  • snownyte@kbin.run
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    2 months ago

    Aside from using the word ‘consume’…

    I don’t like hoarding. I become so isolated from choice that I can’t enjoy anything I’ve ever acquired. I’ve always gotten what I wanted because I wanted it, not because everyone else has gotten it and not because it’s just to take up data on my drives. What I have now currently anyways, will sustain me for days to months and getting more of it will not make it better. It’ll just bring oversaturation and I’ll be too isolated again to bother.

  • herrcaptain@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Avoid hoarding? Let’s just say I bring a real “gotta catch em all” energy to the trackers.

  • dhhyfddehhfyy4673@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    How do you avoid “hoarding”?

    I dont. Hard drives are increasingly cheap/large. I have to really dislike something to delete it. I have a fair amount of content that I don’t really plan on watching again, but someone I know might like it so i just leave it typically.

    • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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      2 months ago

      I have to really dislike something to delete it.

      The velma tv show was the last item I just deleted.

      But for me this is the same story. I’m up to 400TB… I’m just over half full. I’ve got plenty to go, and if I make to to 75-80% full, then I’m going to get me a 45 or 60 bay server and upgrade from my 36 bay one. 6 of the bays are wasted on SSD caching currently… Just finding a chassis that doesn’t waste the 3.5 inch bays on 2.5 drives would allow me to add a full vdev(another 100TB…).

      Old chassis can be had on ebay relatively cheaply.

        • Saik0@lemmy.saik0.com
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          2 months ago

          I do not have full proper offsites… yet.

          I run proxmox, so if it’s live on a server it’s probably on my ~70TB (really 40*2TB ssd) ceph cluster. Which makes 3 copies across the 5 boxes, so it’s more like 23TB of usable space for all my vms and such. The 400TB of storage is Truenas is really closer to 300TB after all the losses in raidz vdev and hot spares and what have you, there’s 30x 16TB SAS seagates in the box, of which 2 are hot spares and 7 are parity for raidz1… For things that are slow or linear loads (a movie file could be a good example of that type of workload!). Backups of the the proxmox boxes… and mass stored stuff, 99% of it I could easily obtain again if I had to. Although I’d probably be pretty flustered about it.

          Truly important stuff gets written to 100GB bluray(s) (specifically m-disc blurays) and put in the safe. I do this probably about once a year or so…

          My dad was in the process of setting up his own cluster that’s running 14TB drives rather than my 16TB… When he’s finally done I intend to requisition probably about half of his space for offsite storage (maybe more). I’m figuring about 100TB of space is what I’ll have there. Maybe more. He’s about 65 miles away from me, different electrical grid and all.

          So the count as it stands now. Everything running has at least 2 copies on 2 mediums (ceph cluster, and spinning rust). My “linux iso” repositories only live on the spinning rust storage, but is low priority anyway. Super important highly sensitive shit lives on at least 3 copies and 3 mediums, although one of the mediums may be out of date and none is offsite… Though it’s rare I add to this category. There is plans for adding another copy of data, offsite on harddrive storage for most of my dataset as it is now.

          Truenas usages:

          Truenas Pool Storage image showing 147.24 TiB Free space with 57% utilization.

          Truenas Topology which shows my storage configuration

          And here’s Ceph

          Image of dial graph showing 27% usage of a 70TiB ceph storage

          • unconfirmedsourcesDOTgov@lemmy.sdf.org
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            2 months ago

            Your setup: goals.

            Where are you sourcing your hardware? Decommissioned enterprise DC stuff or are there options outside of the enterprise space that enable this type of setup?

  • Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    I’m concerned that crackdowns on pirating will come sooner or later. At some point it may become too much of a hassle. So I’m hoarding a lifetime of old movies and games to hold me over.

        • Emerald@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 months ago

          Why would any country ban torrenting? Torrenting isn’t illegal, downloading and distributing copyrighted works is

          • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 months ago

            What I mean is what is already happening in some countries, that is having laws that makes extra easy for copyright lawers to sue anyone using torrent for sharing their IP.

  • Bianca_0089@lemmy.today
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    26 days ago

    I just watch and delete because I don’t ever really watch anything more than a few times anyways.

    The only kind of stuff I’ve ever made backups of is dev software and old keygens because . well - that kind of stuff disappears too easily with the new&shiny fad.

  • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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    2 months ago

    I have a lot of ebooks that I download for university research, hobby learning and friends who ask for help sourcing books. I put everything in my calibre library, which is great for metadata management (tip: I have it set so new books that I’ve just imported get a tag of “new”, which I remove when I have processed their metadata. This allows me to chip away at ensuring the metadata is correct and good, even if I don’t do it at time of import).

    Anyway, at one point I found myself at risk of becoming overwhelmed by books, because if I’m wanting to learn some category theory, for example, I’d have multiple books that seem to be relevant. Some of them were recommended by programmers, some of them assume a higher level of maths background knowledge, some of them are more fun to read — once upon a time I might’ve known which was which, but if there’s a significant gap between me downloading stuff and using it (which is often the case, I’m quite opportunistic with book recommendations), I may forget. Making a note of why I downloaded a particular book is something I’ve been trying to do more, so I can identify the useful things at the right time — the calibre notes field can work for that, but I’m still figuring out how to manage this in a wider sense because I do a lot of reading and it’s easy to forget why I’m reading a particular thing. I think I have a calibre plugin to show which things I’ve read also.

    Another related thing is that I will take a cursory look over a book when I download it, and I may delete it and not put it into my calibre library. This feels significant because downloading a book doesn’t make it one of my books, ‘taking it home’ and putting it away on my ‘bookshelf’ makes it mine. In short, I try to be mindful in my curation activities, recognising that doing it in big clumps with my whole collection doesn’t really work and that pruning little and often helps more.

    • zaknenou@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      hey you mentioned category theory, any math community on the fediverse? r/math is sometimes gold but most of the time cringe, because… reddit

      • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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        28 days ago

        Sorry to reply to this so late, I procrastinated because unfortunately my answer is that I don’t know of any communities, perhaps because I’m a scientist who loves maths rather than a mathematician.

        However, I will use this opportunity to share some fun stuff from people I like.

        https://youtu.be/H0Ek86IH-3Y by Oliver Lugg on Youtube is great. His channel is very eclectic though, and there isn’t much pure maths. I love his shitposting tone though, and he has a discord community that were pretty mathsy when I was in it.

        A blog-type site that I enjoy is Tai-Danae Bradley’s https://www.math3ma.com/about, largely because I’ve discovered many other cool researchers through her site.

        I also really enjoy Eugenia Cheng’s books, especially as someone who is interested in understanding how to write good scientific communication that is accessible without “dumbing things down”. I recently finished “The Joy of Abstraction”.

        Apologies that this isn’t what you actually were looking for. I share your distaste at Reddit: I have used Reddit occasionally for those niche communities that aren’t available elsewhere (yet!), but the atmosphere is increasingly toxic. I fear that smaller communities that flee are congealing in harder to discover places, like Discord.

        • zaknenou@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          25 days ago

          thank you

          Sorry to reply to this so late, I procrastinated because unfortunately my answer is that I don’t know

          relatable lool, “I can’t do it rn cuz I still don’t know how to perfectly”

  • littlecolt@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    Avoid hoarding? I don’t understand. My 30 TB file server can be expanded further still.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    I avoid hoarding by only grabbing things I know I’ll use. With movies/shows, if I haven’t used it in three months, it goes away. With music, I tend to go in cycles through genres where I’ll be vibing to a given type of music for a month or two, then switch things up. So the cutoff is much longer, years in fact.

    But books are a slower thing to begin with. I’m a notoriously fast reader, capable of consuming light fiction at a book and a half to two books a day. Something like the Sookie Stackhouse books by Charlaine Harris, as an example, I can zip through the entire series in under a week if nothing interferes. But even at that speed (which isn’t consistent when there’s heavier material), it would still take years to go through my digital library. Plus, the files are small enough that I don’t have to worry about the space, so they only get deleted if I dislike something new.

    The exception to all of that is some classics that I keep around just for the hell of it. Like, I have all the Hitchcock movies, but only watch any given one maybe once in five years. So I still have most of a terabyte of movies that’s as permanent as possible barring redundant storage all failing at once.

    Music is similar, especially since most of it is in flac format. There’s some stuff I may not listen to often, but I want to keep immediately available.

    Which, believe it or not, isn’t hoarding. I go through things and weed out fairly regularly. It’s just that after a collection is big enough, it takes longer to cycle through and use a given file again. Stuff that’s used isn’t hoarded.

  • tobogganablaze@lemmus.org
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    2 months ago

    All the time. It’s my primary source of entertainment media. And why would I want to avoid hoarding? Hoarding is the goal.

  • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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    2 months ago

    Haha, good question. You’re not alone with that. I suppose you just clean up once per year. Like you’re supposed to do with your wardrobe, or that one drawer in the kitchen…