There is Mastodon. You just have to get used to it.
One_Dollar_Payout
I prefer not to damage my magazines in any way, at least for now.
Agreed. I was using TiviMate on my NVIDIA Shield TV when I still had an active IPTV subscription, and nothing comes close in terms of usability and ease of use. I wish legit IPTV providers could offer us a way to watch TV from them with all those apps.
PSP. I remember seeing, playing and enjoying games (particularly LittleBigPlanet and Burnout Dominator) on my then-friends' consoles multiple times in a few years, before finally getting my own in 2015.
No, but it works with ComfyUI. I'm testing it right now.
I had no personal experience neither with iOS nor Apollo, but Wefwef feels so polished, so smooth, almost like it's a real app, that it's now one of my favorite apps altogether. It made me appreciate Lemmy even more.
That's exactly what I'm using for downloading songs from Deezer. It's really good. Slider(dot)kz is also a good alternative.
I remember using SaveFrom for a few months after ClipConverter.cc banned downloading music and music videos from YouTube. However like you I then discovered youtube-dl and I haven't even looked back since. It's truly the best out there.
I download music from Deezer, 90% of what I want is there. For the remaining 10% I use SoulSeek.
The thing is not every popular or moderately popular song is on any streaming site. I'm a fan of 90s and 00s trance music, and there are some notable songs that aren't available on any of the most popular paid services, or are available only in newer, re-recorded versions or remixes - some of them are available on Spotify, but not all. YouTube Music has such an advantage that you can listen not only to the songs uploaded by record labels, but also to countless additional songs available on YouTube, however most of the time they are in worse quality (AFAIK max audio bit rate in YT videos is 128 kbps). So while streaming services are now affordable and have very extensive audio library, they have some shortcomings that one can only fill with physical media or piracy.
I support this, but I think some Reddit communities will probably take years to rebuild, if most of their users won't be interested in going to Lemmy in the short term - and that's what looks to be the case for now in most non-tech communities. Also, I think those moving subreddits which could choose not to continue on Reddit should at least change their status from private to restricted AFTER the blackout, so the users could access archival, often valuable content, for example when searching on Google for answers to specific questions.
If you are on Windows, you already have a good antivirus program built in, and that is Windows Defender. Other than that, be sure to install uBlock Origin extension in your preferred browser - it not only eliminates ads, but also annoying pop-ups, embeds, trackers, malware sites and other annoying things on the internet. When you want to download something, and you're not sure if it's safe, scan the download link with VirusTotal.