- cross-posted to:
- piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- memes@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- memes@lemmy.ml
Stolen from mastodon
Their caption “look, it’s all my favorite streaming services on one platform!” Is probably better than mine lol
Stolen from mastodon
Their caption “look, it’s all my favorite streaming services on one platform!” Is probably better than mine lol
Usenet >
Kinda? Kind of bad for anything that’s new though but anything that’s older than the last decade it is amazing.
What? I’m in 3 private torrent trackers, and have usenet also and 90% of stuff I grab with *arr software are from usenet, even stuff that’s new/releasing rn have best releases on usenet.
Only way torrent is better is if you get into those super private trackers but otherwise usenet is still better in my case.
For me torrents are better because I don’t want to pay for stuff. 🤷♂️
Maybe I’m just looking in the wrong places but anytime I try to look for anything that came out recently at all it doesn’t exist usually takes a minute.
Define “a minute”. I normally get things from Usenet within minutes of it finishing airing
What is Usenet? (Obviously don’t feel obligated to answer)
tl;dr: You download files from a server you pay to access. Faster and more secure (assuming you trust the server host).
I use Eweka and NZBGeek as my indexer. If you don’t have access to fancy private torrent networks then this is a much less painful experience than having to navigate torrent sites these days. Combine with *aar and life is pretty sweet.
Do these servers get attacked and taken down like it sometimes happens with trackers?
They’ll sometimes have issues but I haven’t ever heard of an actual attack against any of them.
You’ll need a Usenet server but at least two is preferable - one following DMCA and one following NTD.
Then you’ll need indexers. There’s no limit on these that you’ll want. Each will have different content and you can use some services to track how often you actually get good results from them or how much overlap there is.
Then get a download client. I like SABNZBd.
After that, you can automate it. Sonarr is gold standard for TV shows and Radarr for movies. Lidarr exists for music but it’s pretty hard to automate good music since there are so many different versions - radio edits, DJ, live, samples, remixes, etc.
Best part about Usenet is that it’s much easier to get what you want. With Torrents, you’re relying on seeders for each file you’re downloading. These mostly end up being newer media and usually the shittiest quality someone can produce (looking at you, YIFY).
With Usenet, it’s all coming from the servers. If it’s been uploaded, it’s almost always still there and you can usually download it as fast as your Internet connection allows. Sometimes you’ll find missing parts, almost always due to either DMCA/NTD requests or because the uploads were old and not downloaded recently enough. The former is the reason I recommend at least two servers. However, you’ll still usually have multiple other versions of that file uploaded elsewhere. If you’re using Sonarr/Radarr, they will mark it as a failed download and try another matching item instead.
It’s very sweet. Gonna through DrunkenSlug in as well. I’ve used geek, eweka, slug, and abnzb. I currently use geek and slug. Eweka is also great, just didn’t re-up. Abnzb is meh.
Torrenting for old people /s
Hey, I’m not that old. I just have opinions as to my lawn and your proximity to it.
When the internet was a better place.
It was only a better place when access was gatekept by universities and research institutes. Once the general public was allowed in, carpetbaggers from Florida (the same sorts who would get into crypto a generation later) realised that you could flood the discussion forums the trusting natives had built with spam for no cost, and if even one person out of millions took the bait, you’d come out on top. It became a blasted wasteland soon after that, with people retreating to mailing lists.
The Longest of Septembers
alt.syntax.tactical