• MrRawRats@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I strongly disagree on that point. Preservation of the internet is extremely important for cultural and historical reasons. Just look at the enormous amount of old websites stored on the internet archive and how helpful as well as culturally significant that preservation effort is. And that is only a drop in the ocean compared to how big the internet actually is.

      Yes preserving stuff, especially video, takes enormous amounts of data and is hard but is well worth the effort in the end.

        • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          takes enormous amounts of data and is hard

          Seems like this was acknowledged, but a good point nonetheless (that’s often overlooked).

          I’m currently sitting on 4TB of data (that’s largely movies and TV shows), running on 4-year-old hardware, with 3 local replicants, backed up to cloud.

          My power and cloud costs are trivial - about 25 cents a day - that’s less than $100/year (after hardware costs, which come out to about $150/year to continue with similar performance levels). My 4 year old “server” idles at about 20 watts. I can probably bring this down to perhaps 10w with a newer NUC or similar.

          I could easily store everything my extended family produces (including cousins, about 50 people) with a similar setup. In fact, I’m working on just such a project - an SFF or NUC type device with sufficient.

          Edit: autocorrect changed $100 to $10

    • AlolanYoda@mander.xyz
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      6 months ago

      Man, same on the point about YouTube shorts ruining my attention span. The only thing keeping me from an addiction, I feel, is a feeling of guilt when watching shorts instead of long form content.

      Whenever I do watch long form content it ends up being more fulfilling and entertaining, too, so I have no idea why our brains are so biased towards short form content.