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Nowadays I use autorun program for almost any type of files I have on my PC, it doesn't matter where the files are, this app has ini file where you can insert unlimited nuber of entries, group anything the way you like - movies, music, games, setup files, you can open folders with it, there is also description windows where if you mod your games you can write guide in case you need to install the game once again, etc.

Program is few KB only, minimalistic view, doesn't have anything unnecessary, it does what I need, all I have in one place which can be accessed with one click, attached is just a very small example.

Music - I don't download nor buy music, I usually have online radio from my country stored in Aimp - though good music is available during the summer only, and if I listen something from youtube, I use plugin for Aimp since I can use equalizer to improve the sound, everything is available, at least what I listen, now there is even youtube music which will replace google play music, there is a lot of subscriptions programs, but I don't see a point in paying anything just to listen what I can listen for free.

TV Shows & Movies - there is no way I would buy sth, I'm not against it but once I watch sth I have it in memory for a very long time, way too long, so I have wishlist and when I know I will have time, I pay subscription for one month and that is usually enough, it keeps me satisfied, I also play games and do other things, it is not that I'm going to be 24/7 in front of TV/PC and watch like a zombie. :)
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jamesplayinggames: I know you can actually download on itunes, but it's only 720p.
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eric5h5: No, you can download 1080p. The bitrate is...not really Blu-ray. But it's OK. Studios won't let you download 4K though, only stream it.
So after you said that I had to check it out again. WOW Itunes is the worst store experience ever! But there was a burried option for 1080p. A 1080p episode of Taboo was 2.8gb whereas my bluray rips are 10+. That's some heavy compression or downscaling there.

And regardless of all that, the files are DRM protected.
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DrazenCro: Nowadays I use autorun program for almost any type of files I have on my PC, it doesn't matter where the files are, this app has ini file where you can insert unlimited nuber of entries, group anything the way you like - movies, music, games, setup files, you can open folders with it, there is also description windows where if you mod your games you can write guide in case you need to install the game once again, etc.

Program is few KB only, minimalistic view, doesn't have anything unnecessary, it does what I need, all I have in one place which can be accessed with one click, attached is just a very small example.

Music - I don't download nor buy music, I usually have online radio from my country stored in Aimp - though good music is available during the summer only, and if I listen something from youtube, I use plugin for Aimp since I can use equalizer to improve the sound, everything is available, at least what I listen, now there is even youtube music which will replace google play music, there is a lot of subscriptions programs, but I don't see a point in paying anything just to listen what I can listen for free.

TV Shows & Movies - there is no way I would buy sth, I'm not against it but once I watch sth I have it in memory for a very long time, way too long, so I have wishlist and when I know I will have time, I pay subscription for one month and that is usually enough, it keeps me satisfied, I also play games and do other things, it is not that I'm going to be 24/7 in front of TV/PC and watch like a zombie. :)
I usually rewatch shows after 3-5 years. That and it's nice to show other people when I'm talking about a show, then we could binge the whole series together with my library. :)

I use Youtube Music myself because it's really good at recommending music. I also purchase it because I want to legally be able to move it around different devices, listen to it on my radio without commercials (who listens to radio?). Actually a lot of what I do now is to remove the insane amount of advertising we get when consuming media.
Post edited August 08, 2020 by jamesplayinggames
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jamesplayinggames: ...WOW Itunes is the worst store experience ever!...
There's a bigger problem with iTunes. The piece below is copied from the November 2018 issue of Home Cinema Choice ("in The Mix" by Jon Thompson):

The wrongs of rights
According to my HCC colleague John Archer, a man contacted him to ask why of the one hundred 4K titles he'd purchased via Apple's iTunes service, he now had only one title showing in his virtual collection, They had just vanished. To add insult to injury, some people are now reporting that they're being asked to buy titles that they've already bought, in an issue involving a movie studio renewing with another distributor and altering the titles' current rights.
That a studio can renew its contract with the provider, and titles that are no longer in the renewal will disappear, shows how stupid the online content business is.
Another scenario arises if the provider goes bankrupt or stops its services. If that happened from a physical media company, I would still be able to play the disc and it would probably go up in value as it would now be rare. A classic example of this is the Channel 4 TV series Live from Abbey Road. The Blu-ray master was physically lost so you could no longer nip to a shop to get a copy of the Series 1 disc - if you look on eBay, you can see it selling for more than £500. Another example of why virtual media is not just virtually worthless - it is worthless.
Post edited August 08, 2020 by AstralWanderer
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jamesplayinggames: I usually rewatch shows after 3-5 years. That and it's nice to show other people when I'm talking about a show, then we could binge the whole series together with my library. :)

I use Youtube Music myself because it's really good at recommending music. I also purchase it because I want to legally be able to move it around different devices, listen to it on my radio without commercials (who listens to radio?). Actually a lot of what I do now is to remove the insane amount of advertising we get when consuming media.
Yeah, agree about shows. :)

Well, unlimited internet gives me an option not to purchase music, if I had limited one then I would think about it for sure. During the summer they broadcast all latest hits on radio, so why not, I always hear some hit which I can then search and listen it again, and there isn't a lot of commercials, otherwise I wouldn't listen to them. Same with youtube, if ad blocker doesn't do its things, I would go crazy because of ads, but zero ads means a lot new experience, though I use aimp for youtube so there wouldn't be ads no matter, and opera solves ads on mobile phone.
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jamesplayinggames: ...WOW Itunes is the worst store experience ever!...
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AstralWanderer: There's a bigger problem with iTunes. The piece below is copied from the November 2018 issue of Home Cinema Choice ("in The Mix" by Jon Thompson):

The wrongs of rights
According to my HCC colleague John Archer, a man contacted him to ask why of the one hundred 4K titles he'd purchased via Apple's iTunes service, he now had only one title showing in his virtual collection, They had just vanished. To add insult to injury, some people are now reporting that they're being asked to buy titles that they've already bought, in an issue involving a movie studio renewing with another distributor and altering the titles' current rights.
That a studio can renew its contract with the provider, and titles that are no longer in the renewal will disappear, shows how stupid the online content business is.
Another scenario arises if the provider goes bankrupt or stops its services. If that happened from a physical media company, I would still be able to play the disc and it would probably go up in value as it would now be rare. A classic example of this is the Channel 4 TV series Live from Abbey Road. The Blu-ray master was physically lost so you could no longer nip to a shop to get a copy of the Series 1 disc - if you look on eBay, you can see it selling for more than £500. Another example of why virtual media is not just virtually worthless - it is worthless.
This. People think steam will always exist, or whatever big library. It won't. I'm actually a little nervous that gog will not be here some day and windows will update to 11 or 12 or whatever name, and poof my games don't work. If that happens I'm done with digital media.
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jamesplayinggames: This. People think steam will always exist, or whatever big library. It won't. I'm actually a little nervous that gog will not be here some day and windows will update to 11 or 12 or whatever name, and poof my games don't work...
In all fairness, the above situation shouldn't happen with GOG. The downloadable offline installers require no online check (or even Internet access) so will work even if GOG shuts down (or pulls another stupid publicity stunt). As long as customers do download them and keep backups (ideally multiple) then there is little to go wrong...

...aside from the case of GOG updating an installer in a way that breaks compatibility with your OS. In this case, a technical solution (see end of thread) has been developed, but it does now make sense to check out a new installer version before deleting your previous one (compatibility aside, some other changes, like the switch to ScummVM instead of DOSBox with some old adventure games, may make older installers more useful).

Even in cases where GOG has lost distribution rights and had to delist a game, those that purchased it still keep it in their library - Race Driver GRID being one example I can verify..
Post edited August 15, 2020 by AstralWanderer
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jamesplayinggames: This. People think steam will always exist, or whatever big library. It won't. I'm actually a little nervous that gog will not be here some day and windows will update to 11 or 12 or whatever name, and poof my games don't work. If that happens I'm done with digital media.
You'll only play games on analog tapes that magically work without an OS?
Games and Music are super easy to use DRM-Free, but I am really struggling on what to do about movies.

I do like to rewatch movies, so I have bought a few on blu-ray. But I would prefer to switch to digital if it was the same or similar quality, but all the options seem to have DRM. I hate iTunes so I won't be spending any money there. Is there any store you can buy from where the movie isn't tied to the client?

I was looking and it should be possible to rip my blu-rays, but I'm not sure how big the files are going to get. I have a 4TB external and around 100 blu-rays. Do you think it will be enough?
I'm rarely into TV shows and am very movie focused, so "DRM free" Blu-rays, as in no internet required, works out fine for me. Vague stories lately about Disney dropping discs, but mostly only for old re-releases. There will come a day when Star Wars 18 is only on streaming, but hopefully it takes a long while.

Music I just buy on Amazon MP3 store, no big.

Games I buy here whenever possible for the principle, but I also buy on Steam and Origin when required. I don't think it's as bad as buying a streaming movie because A) they work without internet after install, and B) I trust the PC gaming community to keep games running, because they've been doing it for decades. If Steam ever falls (a big if) then ways to get Steamworks games working will be very commonplace I feel, be it a Steam emulator or simple cracks. The PC gaming community will not allow thousands of games to vanish overnight.
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llamas: Games and Music are super easy to use DRM-Free, but I am really struggling on what to do about movies.

I do like to rewatch movies, so I have bought a few on blu-ray. But I would prefer to switch to digital if it was the same or similar quality, but all the options seem to have DRM. I hate iTunes so I won't be spending any money there. Is there any store you can buy from where the movie isn't tied to the client?

I was looking and it should be possible to rip my blu-rays, but I'm not sure how big the files are going to get. I have a 4TB external and around 100 blu-rays. Do you think it will be enough?
Online distribution of movies is going towards streaming - I wouldn't hope for LESS DRM in the future.

4 TB seems a bit small for 100 non-transcoded blu-rays. It all depends on how much data each disk contains. And you'll need an utility to get past the copy protection (which most blu-rays have).
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llamas: I was looking and it should be possible to rip my blu-rays, but I'm not sure how big the files are going to get. I have a 4TB external and around 100 blu-rays. Do you think it will be enough?
You should be able to fit them all on there. I've only tried ripping DVDs so far but from a quick search it seems that a blu-ray rip would be about 20-30 GB, plus you can reduce that a bit if you don't mind a small drop in quality. I'd love to find somewhere to buy films to download in decent quality with no DRM.

Edit: teceem beat me to it! A lot of people recommend Handbrake for ripping. It can reduce the file size too if that's something you want (it bothers me though so I'd probably rather just watch the blu-ray if it's one of my favourite films).
Post edited August 15, 2020 by HappyPunkPotato
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llamas: I was looking and it should be possible to rip my blu-rays, but I'm not sure how big the files are going to get. I have a 4TB external and around 100 blu-rays. Do you think it will be enough?
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HappyPunkPotato: You should be able to fit them all on there. I've only tried ripping DVDs so far but from a quick search it seems that a blu-ray rip would be about 20-30 GB, plus you can reduce that a bit if you don't mind a small drop in quality. I'd love to find somewhere to buy films to download in decent quality with no DRM.

Edit: teceem beat me to it! A lot of people recommend Handbrake for ripping. It can reduce the file size too if that's something you want (it bothers me though so I'd probably rather just watch the blu-ray if it's one of my favourite films).
Yeah thanks. I'm just looking to reduce the number of blu-rays I have since some of them I'will not likely watch too much. I think getting it down to maybe 30-50 of my all time favorites to keep and rip the rest and then try to sell them.
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llamas: Yeah thanks. I'm just looking to reduce the number of blu-rays I have since some of them I'will not likely watch too much. I think getting it down to maybe 30-50 of my all time favorites to keep and rip the rest and then try to sell them.
I'm in a similar situation with loads of DVDs that we never get round to watching. Luckily by the time I started buying blu-rays I'd already decided to only buy my favourites. It's all GOG's fault anyway, I was perfectly happy with my physical collections before I realised how convenient DRM-free downloads were!