Discoverability on the Fediverse and Thought Dump
-
This all looks very promising. Is immers.space still going? I saw they were a co-op and thought that was a bonus too but I get nothing when I go to their site.
here's their github -- looks like the last commits were January 2024. https://github.com/immers-space/immers
-
here's their github -- looks like the last commits were January 2024. https://github.com/immers-space/immers
Ah, that's a shame. Feels like another one of those things that came around slightly too early and now there'd be more of an uptake in folks using it. Wonder what it'd take to revive it.
-
Ah, that's a shame. Feels like another one of those things that came around slightly too early and now there'd be more of an uptake in folks using it. Wonder what it'd take to revive it.
That is, aside from the obvious answer of financial resources. https://opencollective.com/immers-space
-
Not sure how best to approach this really but I was thinking about discoverability on the Fediverse and taking notice of a lot of the streaming articles coming out of late (plus Liz Pelly's book). At the same time, I'm also seeing interesting visual platforms popping up like https://www.soot.com and https://rooms.xyz (both backed by private investors though
) and wondering about what it would take to pull people away from streaming, if knowing "it's bad" isn't enough. It sort of reminded me of things I liked about the early internet and sites with clickable Flash-based comics and online places such as BowieNet. So, without this turning into a Grandpa Simpson-style ramble, I feel like there needs to be a site that takes the best of the links below and makes a strong, fun visual space where musicians can be found randomly, either by something like location, or by creating clusters of artists or maps of listener recommendations. Mirlo have just started testing out linking musicians to labels (without it being a paid feature like Bandcamp) and I think that's a really exciting start plus the Fediwall from Indie Beat and @limebar is also really cool (in the last day there is also a live app hoping to launch called Subjam which is aiming to link to music venues and their communities) and I was curious if there's a way of building on that and even linking a few different ideas together? Here's a few examples of things that are/were slightly more offbeat ways of discovering things (aside from the aforementioned Soot and Rooms):
- Ghostly's now defunct app, where you could select from their catalogue based on "Mood" (but it was actually a colour wheel, because I downloaded it at the time).
- This genre map where you can click around then it gives examples in a playlist.
- Every Noise at Once (although I appreciate we don't necessarily want to fall under genres pushed as part of an end of year ad campaign cough cough Spotify Wrapped).
- Radio Garden - imagine this but with musicians and showing lines that indicate links between them. It's slightly infuriating that you can collaborate with your friends across your projects but on streaming, your musical projects aren't shown as being related in any way. It'd be a neat way of visualising that context and encouraging people to discover how different people are interconnected ("interdependent").
- A Number from the Ghost is one person's site but what if there was something showing fedi musicians videos in this kind of way? Or as floating images in a "constellation" (to use @Alex's terminology) that are scattered around and clickable.
Obviously some are more complex or resource-intensive than others, but it seems like there might be some weirder ideas that could help people get found in the same way you might stumble into a record shop and find something bizarre? It's hard to articulate, so I'm going to end the post here and let other people chime in.
Edited to add in Emma Warren's book, which might also have started some of this.
Ampwall just released an update to their front page that is based on record shop walls. https://ampwall.com
-
Not sure how best to approach this really but I was thinking about discoverability on the Fediverse and taking notice of a lot of the streaming articles coming out of late (plus Liz Pelly's book). At the same time, I'm also seeing interesting visual platforms popping up like https://www.soot.com and https://rooms.xyz (both backed by private investors though
) and wondering about what it would take to pull people away from streaming, if knowing "it's bad" isn't enough. It sort of reminded me of things I liked about the early internet and sites with clickable Flash-based comics and online places such as BowieNet. So, without this turning into a Grandpa Simpson-style ramble, I feel like there needs to be a site that takes the best of the links below and makes a strong, fun visual space where musicians can be found randomly, either by something like location, or by creating clusters of artists or maps of listener recommendations. Mirlo have just started testing out linking musicians to labels (without it being a paid feature like Bandcamp) and I think that's a really exciting start plus the Fediwall from Indie Beat and @limebar is also really cool (in the last day there is also a live app hoping to launch called Subjam which is aiming to link to music venues and their communities) and I was curious if there's a way of building on that and even linking a few different ideas together? Here's a few examples of things that are/were slightly more offbeat ways of discovering things (aside from the aforementioned Soot and Rooms):
- Ghostly's now defunct app, where you could select from their catalogue based on "Mood" (but it was actually a colour wheel, because I downloaded it at the time).
- This genre map where you can click around then it gives examples in a playlist.
- Every Noise at Once (although I appreciate we don't necessarily want to fall under genres pushed as part of an end of year ad campaign cough cough Spotify Wrapped).
- Radio Garden - imagine this but with musicians and showing lines that indicate links between them. It's slightly infuriating that you can collaborate with your friends across your projects but on streaming, your musical projects aren't shown as being related in any way. It'd be a neat way of visualising that context and encouraging people to discover how different people are interconnected ("interdependent").
- A Number from the Ghost is one person's site but what if there was something showing fedi musicians videos in this kind of way? Or as floating images in a "constellation" (to use @Alex's terminology) that are scattered around and clickable.
Obviously some are more complex or resource-intensive than others, but it seems like there might be some weirder ideas that could help people get found in the same way you might stumble into a record shop and find something bizarre? It's hard to articulate, so I'm going to end the post here and let other people chime in.
Edited to add in Emma Warren's book, which might also have started some of this.
I recently came across a fediverse post looking for digital versions of old albums by independent artists. Not because he needed copies of the music, it turned out, but because he wanted to give the artists money.
I've often thought it would be useful to have a service where we could search any song or album title and get info about payment methods preferred by the releasing artist.
-
I recently came across a fediverse post looking for digital versions of old albums by independent artists. Not because he needed copies of the music, it turned out, but because he wanted to give the artists money.
I've often thought it would be useful to have a service where we could search any song or album title and get info about payment methods preferred by the releasing artist.
Could this work pulling info from MusicBrainz or Discogs?
-
Not sure how best to approach this really but I was thinking about discoverability on the Fediverse and taking notice of a lot of the streaming articles coming out of late (plus Liz Pelly's book). At the same time, I'm also seeing interesting visual platforms popping up like https://www.soot.com and https://rooms.xyz (both backed by private investors though
) and wondering about what it would take to pull people away from streaming, if knowing "it's bad" isn't enough. It sort of reminded me of things I liked about the early internet and sites with clickable Flash-based comics and online places such as BowieNet. So, without this turning into a Grandpa Simpson-style ramble, I feel like there needs to be a site that takes the best of the links below and makes a strong, fun visual space where musicians can be found randomly, either by something like location, or by creating clusters of artists or maps of listener recommendations. Mirlo have just started testing out linking musicians to labels (without it being a paid feature like Bandcamp) and I think that's a really exciting start plus the Fediwall from Indie Beat and @limebar is also really cool (in the last day there is also a live app hoping to launch called Subjam which is aiming to link to music venues and their communities) and I was curious if there's a way of building on that and even linking a few different ideas together? Here's a few examples of things that are/were slightly more offbeat ways of discovering things (aside from the aforementioned Soot and Rooms):
- Ghostly's now defunct app, where you could select from their catalogue based on "Mood" (but it was actually a colour wheel, because I downloaded it at the time).
- This genre map where you can click around then it gives examples in a playlist.
- Every Noise at Once (although I appreciate we don't necessarily want to fall under genres pushed as part of an end of year ad campaign cough cough Spotify Wrapped).
- Radio Garden - imagine this but with musicians and showing lines that indicate links between them. It's slightly infuriating that you can collaborate with your friends across your projects but on streaming, your musical projects aren't shown as being related in any way. It'd be a neat way of visualising that context and encouraging people to discover how different people are interconnected ("interdependent").
- A Number from the Ghost is one person's site but what if there was something showing fedi musicians videos in this kind of way? Or as floating images in a "constellation" (to use @Alex's terminology) that are scattered around and clickable.
Obviously some are more complex or resource-intensive than others, but it seems like there might be some weirder ideas that could help people get found in the same way you might stumble into a record shop and find something bizarre? It's hard to articulate, so I'm going to end the post here and let other people chime in.
Edited to add in Emma Warren's book, which might also have started some of this.
I think @limebar is onto something cool with music vids...
-
Not sure how best to approach this really but I was thinking about discoverability on the Fediverse and taking notice of a lot of the streaming articles coming out of late (plus Liz Pelly's book). At the same time, I'm also seeing interesting visual platforms popping up like https://www.soot.com and https://rooms.xyz (both backed by private investors though
) and wondering about what it would take to pull people away from streaming, if knowing "it's bad" isn't enough. It sort of reminded me of things I liked about the early internet and sites with clickable Flash-based comics and online places such as BowieNet. So, without this turning into a Grandpa Simpson-style ramble, I feel like there needs to be a site that takes the best of the links below and makes a strong, fun visual space where musicians can be found randomly, either by something like location, or by creating clusters of artists or maps of listener recommendations. Mirlo have just started testing out linking musicians to labels (without it being a paid feature like Bandcamp) and I think that's a really exciting start plus the Fediwall from Indie Beat and @limebar is also really cool (in the last day there is also a live app hoping to launch called Subjam which is aiming to link to music venues and their communities) and I was curious if there's a way of building on that and even linking a few different ideas together? Here's a few examples of things that are/were slightly more offbeat ways of discovering things (aside from the aforementioned Soot and Rooms):
- Ghostly's now defunct app, where you could select from their catalogue based on "Mood" (but it was actually a colour wheel, because I downloaded it at the time).
- This genre map where you can click around then it gives examples in a playlist.
- Every Noise at Once (although I appreciate we don't necessarily want to fall under genres pushed as part of an end of year ad campaign cough cough Spotify Wrapped).
- Radio Garden - imagine this but with musicians and showing lines that indicate links between them. It's slightly infuriating that you can collaborate with your friends across your projects but on streaming, your musical projects aren't shown as being related in any way. It'd be a neat way of visualising that context and encouraging people to discover how different people are interconnected ("interdependent").
- A Number from the Ghost is one person's site but what if there was something showing fedi musicians videos in this kind of way? Or as floating images in a "constellation" (to use @Alex's terminology) that are scattered around and clickable.
Obviously some are more complex or resource-intensive than others, but it seems like there might be some weirder ideas that could help people get found in the same way you might stumble into a record shop and find something bizarre? It's hard to articulate, so I'm going to end the post here and let other people chime in.
Edited to add in Emma Warren's book, which might also have started some of this.
Also wanted to add that I was looking for indie animation and filmmaker channels on PeerTube and haven't really found that many people. Really love the weirder end of Adult Swim (look up Ambient Swim if you're not familiar: https://youtu.be/1vzgaNfTUw4) on YouTube, which is kind of like olden day, Run Wrake-era and experimental visuals MTV, and Pictoplasma (https://youtu.be/KbdNYOuAYIM), which combines music, characters and animation in a really endearing and cool way. Wonder if there's the possibility of showcasing indie animators/filmers along with musicians too? Just mega excited seeing some of the experiments happening with videos and desperately want something like this to exist.
-
I think @limebar is onto something cool with music vids...
I really want the music video channel to be a thing. I don't know how to pay for it (or how much it'd cost). But the technology is sitting right there and works great imo...
-
Also wanted to add that I was looking for indie animation and filmmaker channels on PeerTube and haven't really found that many people. Really love the weirder end of Adult Swim (look up Ambient Swim if you're not familiar: https://youtu.be/1vzgaNfTUw4) on YouTube, which is kind of like olden day, Run Wrake-era and experimental visuals MTV, and Pictoplasma (https://youtu.be/KbdNYOuAYIM), which combines music, characters and animation in a really endearing and cool way. Wonder if there's the possibility of showcasing indie animators/filmers along with musicians too? Just mega excited seeing some of the experiments happening with videos and desperately want something like this to exist.
100% would watch an indie animation, film, etc channel. The LiquidSoap script is so doable. Could so easily have a 24x7 station going. A little bird told me RetroStrange is running 24x7 on Linode for around $20/month. I don't know what the bitrates are or storage. You are gonna have costs for:
- owncast bandwidth and cpu
- liquidsoap bandwidth and cpu and storage
1Mbps at 720p looks pretty ok... and 3Mbps 720p looks great (in my limited testing)
and I know how to make a simplistic Roku app for them as well fwiw
-
I really want the music video channel to be a thing. I don't know how to pay for it (or how much it'd cost). But the technology is sitting right there and works great imo...
I know a lot of people use Owncast for 24-hour streams, do you reckon that’s the best thing for it? To me, the social aspect is the best thing about Owncast (chats, “gone live!” notifications, etc), but I dunno if I’m atypical in how I use it.
Had a quick look into discoverability options for, eg, Azuracast video, but I’m not really sure how it all works as I haven’t had a TV for a few decades!
-
I really want the music video channel to be a thing. I don't know how to pay for it (or how much it'd cost). But the technology is sitting right there and works great imo...
What would be the preferred way for folks to contribute? Would it be a monthly/yearly subscription, anytime donations or a fundraiser-style progress bar (could be set up with a monthly or quarterly funding goal to fund 24/7 programming and running costs)? Mirlo is doing a bit of work on fundraiser functionality currently so I don't know if that'd be useful? It came up in a chat that Cory Doctorow funds his books this way.
-
I know a lot of people use Owncast for 24-hour streams, do you reckon that’s the best thing for it? To me, the social aspect is the best thing about Owncast (chats, “gone live!” notifications, etc), but I dunno if I’m atypical in how I use it.
Had a quick look into discoverability options for, eg, Azuracast video, but I’m not really sure how it all works as I haven’t had a TV for a few decades!
owncast seems right to me, federated, has a directory (https://owncast.directory/), seems under active development
EDIT: the directory seems to be getting better, looking more and more like Twitch and features a channel on the landing page... rotates. currently featuring https://swimrewind.com/
looking at their schedule... (all copyrighted material, btw)... they seem 24x7
I don't have a discord login ... maybe could poke around and see if they have costs outlined
-
owncast seems right to me, federated, has a directory (https://owncast.directory/), seems under active development
EDIT: the directory seems to be getting better, looking more and more like Twitch and features a channel on the landing page... rotates. currently featuring https://swimrewind.com/
looking at their schedule... (all copyrighted material, btw)... they seem 24x7
I don't have a discord login ... maybe could poke around and see if they have costs outlined
Are we talking about bringing back music TV as a 24/7 streaming channel using OwnCast?! A video equivalent of Radio Free Fedi? Yes please! I would so watch this, and I would encourage every musician and video artist I know to submit videos to add to the rotation.
-
Are we talking about bringing back music TV as a 24/7 streaming channel using OwnCast?! A video equivalent of Radio Free Fedi? Yes please! I would so watch this, and I would encourage every musician and video artist I know to submit videos to add to the rotation.
There's so much that could be done with this. It's very exciting!
-
There's so much that could be done with this. It's very exciting!
Now I'm imagining a Liquid Television style animation and indie video mashup as an occasional segment on the VFF(1) livestream too. LiquidTV broke my brain (in a good way) when I was a teenager. Yeeharr!
(1) Video Free Fedi
-
Now I'm imagining a Liquid Television style animation and indie video mashup as an occasional segment on the VFF(1) livestream too. LiquidTV broke my brain (in a good way) when I was a teenager. Yeeharr!
(1) Video Free Fedi
Yeah, and I can see how folks could build commissioned animated shorts or livestream replays into the running costs over time (with permission). I'd love it if something like this encouraged indie animators to wander over and check out federated options too. I've seen nothing but negativity around having to post animation work on YouTube and TikTok but frustratingly, it's still the main place to watch them. I wonder what the best way of getting the word out would be? There's also the question of broadcast license stuff potentially, but @Mel knows more about that...
-
Now I'm imagining a Liquid Television style animation and indie video mashup as an occasional segment on the VFF(1) livestream too. LiquidTV broke my brain (in a good way) when I was a teenager. Yeeharr!
(1) Video Free Fedi
P. S. Looks like it was briefly revived before they pivoted to reality TV guff. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ft0wCLHlzCc&list=PLBPLVvU_jvGuR9xrcDN77OhTojYJ9wZCm
-
Yeah, and I can see how folks could build commissioned animated shorts or livestream replays into the running costs over time (with permission). I'd love it if something like this encouraged indie animators to wander over and check out federated options too. I've seen nothing but negativity around having to post animation work on YouTube and TikTok but frustratingly, it's still the main place to watch them. I wonder what the best way of getting the word out would be? There's also the question of broadcast license stuff potentially, but @Mel knows more about that...
I get it, at both ends. I don't watching to be watching video on either platform, but I can access YouTub via liberated web apps (eg Invidio.us), and Android apps (eg NewPipe), and the same things I've said about my use of BandCamp apply here. There's a huge library of stuff to access (too much, really), and search usually finds what I want, or something close enough.
I want PeerTube to be the federated YouTube, but I've seen it pitched as more like a federated Vimeo, and the comparison is apt. The UX of the default web app is pitched more at channel hosts than viewers.
As viewers, we need client apps built around finding and playing videos we want to see, by searching across the full videoverse. All services running PT, OwnCast, Loops, etc, but also video uploaded to any other federated service. And filtering video intelligently, by grouping together short video, TV-style series, feature length content, and live-to-air marathons, in interfaces suitable to those different durations.
-
I get it, at both ends. I don't watching to be watching video on either platform, but I can access YouTub via liberated web apps (eg Invidio.us), and Android apps (eg NewPipe), and the same things I've said about my use of BandCamp apply here. There's a huge library of stuff to access (too much, really), and search usually finds what I want, or something close enough.
I want PeerTube to be the federated YouTube, but I've seen it pitched as more like a federated Vimeo, and the comparison is apt. The UX of the default web app is pitched more at channel hosts than viewers.
As viewers, we need client apps built around finding and playing videos we want to see, by searching across the full videoverse. All services running PT, OwnCast, Loops, etc, but also video uploaded to any other federated service. And filtering video intelligently, by grouping together short video, TV-style series, feature length content, and live-to-air marathons, in interfaces suitable to those different durations.
I still very occasionally lurk on Reddit and a lot of recent comments on the PeerTube community relate to it being difficult or intimidating to join as a viewer. I also asked in the animation community whether anybody was using PeerTube and it didn't get a single response.