

I rarely pirate stuff on Mac but I’ve had this saved in my bookmarks: https://www.torrentmac.net/
More obscure stuff might not be well seeded but I haven’t found anything better.
Mastodon: @misk@lewacki.space
Lemmy: @misk@sopuli.xyz
Opinions exclusively of my own and of voices in my head.
Autism, communism, arthitism, cannabism.
I rarely pirate stuff on Mac but I’ve had this saved in my bookmarks: https://www.torrentmac.net/
More obscure stuff might not be well seeded but I haven’t found anything better.
If you’re a publisher only then RSS/Atom makes much more sense, especially if you want to retain ownership and control over content you created. If control is not important to you and you want to incorporate social aspect into your website (comments, reactions) then ActivityPub seems like a convenient way to go about it.
One thing that I strongly disagree with author of the blog post is the discoverability aspect. Yes, initial federation kind of sucks but at the same time your readers on Mastodon will be able to boost it and increase your reach.
Reddit is astroturfed to hell, I prefer my posts to come from humans rather than companies trying to game system for financial benefit.
That’s still the case so automation + multiple providers is still the way to go. This guy here makes Usenet provider maps so that you can figure out what combination will work the best for you: https://gnu.gl/users/rexum/statuses/114789594488827582
I assumed OP is after some kind of media manager with integrated download capabilities and Zlib doesn’t have anything similar as far as I know.
Couch Potato is pretty much dead, Radarr is the way to go.
Back in the day Sabnzbd was considered slow and inefficient so Nzbget was usually recommended. These days both are pretty much indistinguishable performance-wise and Sabnzbd seems to get more active development.
For plain ebooks there’s a Calibre plugin that integrates Anna’s Archive as a store. Requires a paid account but works okay in my limited experience.
Not going to argue with that, but it does pose challenging questions on how to govern digital archival so that certain lines are not crossed. Current restrictive laws push archival into the grey zone where it’s hard to effectively enforce privacy protections.
Web browsers are the most resource intensive apps these days. Dedicated app doesn’t have to run JavaScript or ask for UI elements over network so it’s better for both battery and bandwidth.
There’s Kodi in WebOS brew appstore. I’ve only ever used Kodi for offline media libraries but as far as I know there’s plenty of third party Kodi addons for this kind of piracy.