Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Moderators: Freakzilla, ᴶᵛᵀᴬ, Omphalos
- Hunchback Jack
- Posts: 1983
- Joined: 30 May 2008 15:02
- Location: California, USA
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I use iTunes only as a way to get stuff to my iDevices. My media doesn't "live" in the iTunes Library. For anything that gets imported into the library automatically, I use iRip to get it off my devices again, and store it elsewhere.
I like Apple products, and don't mind using Apple software to manage them. But they don't hold my media.
HBJ
I like Apple products, and don't mind using Apple software to manage them. But they don't hold my media.
HBJ
"The sky calls to us. If we do not destroy ourselves, we will one day venture to the stars."
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Omphalos
- Inglorious Bastard
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Not sure what you mean by all this HBJ. I use iTunes to play and hold all my media. But the albums, movies, books, etc are all on an accessory hard drive. Is that how you do it?Hunchback Jack wrote:I use iTunes only as a way to get stuff to my iDevices. My media doesn't "live" in the iTunes Library. For anything that gets imported into the library automatically, I use iRip to get it off my devices again, and store it elsewhere.
I like Apple products, and don't mind using Apple software to manage them. But they don't hold my media.
HBJ
Looking for a better way to handle all this stuff. I got a lot of shit that's difficult to handle.
- Robspierre
- Posts: 2162
- Joined: 19 Feb 2008 10:49
- Location: Cascadia
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Omph you could burn copies to disk, but they degrade rather quickly timewise. I use a 3TB external for my itunes stuff that I do not not keep in the cloud.
Rob
Rob
- Hunchback Jack
- Posts: 1983
- Joined: 30 May 2008 15:02
- Location: California, USA
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Omph, what I mean is that all my media lives in its own folder, outside the "Music/iTunes/iTunes Media" folder or wherever it is. When I import, I don't have iTunes copy the stuff into its own Library folder or "organize my music" or whatever.
Essentially, I keep all my mp3's, flac's, mpg's, mkv's etc in its own folder, tagged with standard tags by non-Apple software, etc. I use iTunes to send it to my iDevices, but I always have independent access to it elsewhere using other tools. I un-DRM anything I buy through the iTunes store, too.
I realize iTunes stores things in more-or-less standard formats, so I could always find it inside the Library folder, but I don't like to do that.
Oh, and I don't "sync". I manually manage content on the devices. So my media can be organized on my disk any way I like, I can import or remove it from iTunes as I like regardless of what's on my iPhone, iPod, whatever.
I guess the bottom line is that I don't feel "locked in" by Apple by using iDevices, because the stuff I care about - the media - is completely independent from iTunes. I just use iTunes as a delivery mechanism for the stuff I want to move to the device that day. Not as the focal point of all my media.
HBJ
Essentially, I keep all my mp3's, flac's, mpg's, mkv's etc in its own folder, tagged with standard tags by non-Apple software, etc. I use iTunes to send it to my iDevices, but I always have independent access to it elsewhere using other tools. I un-DRM anything I buy through the iTunes store, too.
I realize iTunes stores things in more-or-less standard formats, so I could always find it inside the Library folder, but I don't like to do that.
Oh, and I don't "sync". I manually manage content on the devices. So my media can be organized on my disk any way I like, I can import or remove it from iTunes as I like regardless of what's on my iPhone, iPod, whatever.
I guess the bottom line is that I don't feel "locked in" by Apple by using iDevices, because the stuff I care about - the media - is completely independent from iTunes. I just use iTunes as a delivery mechanism for the stuff I want to move to the device that day. Not as the focal point of all my media.
HBJ
"The sky calls to us. If we do not destroy ourselves, we will one day venture to the stars."
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Freakzilla
- Lead Singer and Driver of the Winnebego
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
So... if you didn't have iTunes, where would one go to get music?
Paul of Dune was so bad it gave me a seizure that dislocated both of my shoulders and prolapsed my anus.
~Pink Snowman
- lotek
- Posts: 5784
- Joined: 28 Jul 2009 08:33
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I don't download anymore, I stream directly from youtube and soundcloud.
Unlimited data on my phone contract turns my mobile into an internet jukebox.
Unlimited data on my phone contract turns my mobile into an internet jukebox.
Spice is the worm's gonads.
- Freakzilla
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I guess I could listen to Pandora on my phone, or something like that.lotek wrote:I don't download anymore, I stream directly from youtube and soundcloud.
Unlimited data on my phone contract turns my mobile into an internet jukebox.
Paul of Dune was so bad it gave me a seizure that dislocated both of my shoulders and prolapsed my anus.
~Pink Snowman
- SadisticCynic
- Posts: 2053
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Am I the only one who still buys physical albums?
I like having them. I'm at about the 70 mark now, so a decent enough collection. I still have loads of things on my list though.

I like having them. I'm at about the 70 mark now, so a decent enough collection. I still have loads of things on my list though.
Ah English, the language where pretty much any word can have any meaning! - A Thing of Eternity
- Freakzilla
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Most of the ones (CDs) I have are old and scratched.
Paul of Dune was so bad it gave me a seizure that dislocated both of my shoulders and prolapsed my anus.
~Pink Snowman
- Eyes High
- Patience Personified
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
When I have the money I like to get the CDs (and DVDs for for the movies)SadisticCynic wrote:Am I the only one who still buys physical albums?![]()
I like having them. I'm at about the 70 mark now, so a decent enough collection. I still have loads of things on my list though.
Especially for DVDs I like the ones who have the extra features i.e. commentaries and deleted scenes/gag scenes.
What fear is there in the night?
Nothing, but that which is in our own imaginations.
Nothing, but that which is in our own imaginations.
- Freakzilla
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I will not buy this record, it is scratched.
Paul of Dune was so bad it gave me a seizure that dislocated both of my shoulders and prolapsed my anus.
~Pink Snowman
- inhuien
- Posts: 3645
- Joined: 09 Feb 2008 05:03
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I don't record anymore, but used to live in second hand record shops. The last LP I bought was an early copy of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band , and I tell you it looked as if some one had mixed plaster on it. Chap in the shop wanted £15 I gave him a fiver. Took it home cleaned it up by carefully running water over it let it dry and repeat, sure it looks a bit beat up but he grooves on 60s pressing are just so deep it plays like velvet.SadisticCynic wrote:Am I the only one who still buys physical albums?![]()
I like having them. I'm at about the 70 mark now, so a decent enough collection. I still have loads of things on my list though.
Virgin Vinyl FTW.
Don't buy records any more, but got a few hundred in storage, hall press.
- Omphalos
- Inglorious Bastard
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Same here. I used to have dozens of milk crates full of LPs. Sold them all to the shops I bought them from and at yard sales. Now I miss them. I just miss having a wall of records to look at.inhuien wrote:I don't record anymore, but used to live in second hand record shops.
- inhuien
- Posts: 3645
- Joined: 09 Feb 2008 05:03
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Yeah I sold a few for beer tokens, but managed to keep the best.Omphalos wrote:Same here. I used to have dozens of milk crates full of LPs. Sold them all to the shops I bought them from and at yard sales. Now I miss them. I just miss having a wall of records to look at.inhuien wrote:I don't record anymore, but used to live in second hand record shops.
- Freakzilla
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I miss the cover art.


Paul of Dune was so bad it gave me a seizure that dislocated both of my shoulders and prolapsed my anus.
~Pink Snowman
- inhuien
- Posts: 3645
- Joined: 09 Feb 2008 05:03
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Howard Goodall's Story of Music, ep. 2
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... Invention/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... Invention/
Sorry if you can't see it but you've all you need to find it.Iplayer wrote:In the second programme, composer Howard Goodall looks at the extraordinarily fertile musical period between 1650 and 1750, in which many of the musical innovations we take for granted today were invented. The orchestra; the overture, which led, ultimately, to the symphony; satisfying chord sequences, which gave music a forward momentum; modern tuning, which, for the first time, allowed composers to move from one key to any other they chose, and for different instruments to easily play together; the concerto, the oratorio, and, not least, the piano.
- Robspierre
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Drawn Together The Complete Series Uncensored and Uncut
Rob
Rob
- DuneFishUK
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
That was quite interesting - not a subject I really knew anything about.inhuien wrote:Howard Goodall's Story of Music, ep. 2
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b0 ... Invention/
Sorry if you can't see it but you've all you need to find it.Iplayer wrote:In the second programme, composer Howard Goodall looks at the extraordinarily fertile musical period between 1650 and 1750, in which many of the musical innovations we take for granted today were invented. The orchestra; the overture, which led, ultimately, to the symphony; satisfying chord sequences, which gave music a forward momentum; modern tuning, which, for the first time, allowed composers to move from one key to any other they chose, and for different instruments to easily play together; the concerto, the oratorio, and, not least, the piano.
Although the highlight for me was his twisty-turny (and, I think, occasionally digitally extended) projector-screen set...

(Have I missed the point of life?)
- http://www.kullwahad.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; - http://dunefont.kullwahad.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; -
- SadisticCynic
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
That was very interesting, thanks inhuien.
Although the presenter needs to lose the physics envy methinks.
Although the presenter needs to lose the physics envy methinks.

Ah English, the language where pretty much any word can have any meaning! - A Thing of Eternity
- Robspierre
- Posts: 2162
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- Location: Cascadia
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
The Americans on FX. Set during Reagan's administration during the Cold War. Keri Russell is still yummy. Oh, and the show is good too.
Rob
Rob
- trang
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Currently
Sliders(streaming)
The Walking Dead (torrent)
Arrow (TV)
TBBT (TV)
Parks and Rec (TV)
Community (TV)
Sparatacus - War of the Dammed (Torrent)
The Fall Guy (Torrent)
Vikings (Torrent)
Just finished:
Alphas (streaming)
Dresden Files(Streaming)
Waiting for shortly:
Breaking Bad Final Episodes
Falling Skies Season 3
Revolution Second half
Game of Thrones Season 3
Sliders(streaming)
The Walking Dead (torrent)
Arrow (TV)
TBBT (TV)
Parks and Rec (TV)
Community (TV)
Sparatacus - War of the Dammed (Torrent)
The Fall Guy (Torrent)
Vikings (Torrent)
Just finished:
Alphas (streaming)
Dresden Files(Streaming)
Waiting for shortly:
Breaking Bad Final Episodes
Falling Skies Season 3
Revolution Second half
Game of Thrones Season 3
"Long Live the Fighters", "Dragon.....the other white meat."


- Omphalos
- Inglorious Bastard
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Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I'm digging that show too. I see a lot ofmy hometown in it (WDC).Robspierre wrote:The Americans on FX. Set during Reagan's administration during the Cold War. Keri Russell is still yummy. Oh, and the show is good too.
Rob
Also been watching TWD, Justified, and just finished House of Cards. Started Vikings and The Bible today.
- Hunchback Jack
- Posts: 1983
- Joined: 30 May 2008 15:02
- Location: California, USA
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I've been watching the original House of Cards (the BBC series starring Ian Richardson). A bit dated, and not very subtle, but still good entertainment.
Also been watching old Life on Earth episodes, hosted by not-yet-Sir David Attenborough, from 1979. Fascinating, intelligent discussion with some great photography for the time. The Blu rays are mastered from film, so it looks pretty spectacular given its age.
Also waiting for the final Breaking Bad episodes. I hope they find a way to end it well.
HBJ
Also been watching old Life on Earth episodes, hosted by not-yet-Sir David Attenborough, from 1979. Fascinating, intelligent discussion with some great photography for the time. The Blu rays are mastered from film, so it looks pretty spectacular given its age.
Also waiting for the final Breaking Bad episodes. I hope they find a way to end it well.
HBJ
"The sky calls to us. If we do not destroy ourselves, we will one day venture to the stars."
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Omphalos
- Inglorious Bastard
- Posts: 6677
- Joined: 05 Feb 2008 11:07
- Location: The Mighty Central Valley of California
- Contact:
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
I could not get more than fifteen minutes into it. all of that fourth-wall breaking makes me think that version was made for idiots. Felt like I was being talked down to.Hunchback Jack wrote:I've been watching the original House of Cards (the BBC series starring Ian Richardson). A bit dated, and not very subtle, but still good entertainment.
Forgot to mention that I am going back and catching up on the first two seasons of The Killing (AMC version). Not bad. However, I work with a bunch of investigators, many of them ex FBI and ex cop. Not a one of them varies from the "Occam's Razor" version of reality. The cops in that show seem to enjoy looking for the most complicated explanation of things. Not very realistic, IMHO, though the rest of the show is great, and I LOVE the HD scenes of Seattle, my next home town (as soon as I am done with this one).
- Hunchback Jack
- Posts: 1983
- Joined: 30 May 2008 15:02
- Location: California, USA
Re: Television Shows you are watching on TV or DVD now.
Omph, yes it's a bit too obvious that way, but it does settle down a bit in later episodes.
It's a bit of a product of its time, though, when witty, protracted exposition about the inner workings of British politics was all the rage (cf. Yes Minister).
HBJ
It's a bit of a product of its time, though, when witty, protracted exposition about the inner workings of British politics was all the rage (cf. Yes Minister).
HBJ
"The sky calls to us. If we do not destroy ourselves, we will one day venture to the stars."
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks
- Carl Sagan
I'm still very proud of The Quarry but … let's face it; in the end the real best way to sign off would have been with a great big rollicking Culture novel.
- Iain Banks