No JLA/Avengers, which is weird, but I'll probably get them on my list. I'd like to see these published in non-omni paperback collections as well.
Is there any word on size? Some of these were published in a larger size, if I recall.
I actually find the quality of DVDs to be very good with the right equipment. I've seen DVDs projected in movie theaters and they look good. There are bad transfers and I'd certainly take a BluRay over a DVD if there's an option, but overall DVDs are still a solid format that I still use regularly. I've never had the urge to actively seek out an update to something I already have on DVD, though I might grab an upgrade if I see a sale or the mood takes me.
If the company doesn't want to match your salary expectation, then why interview? Are you hoping that meeting with the team will change their mind? I don't have enough experience to know if that happens, but I suspect it's unlikely.
Because the assumption is there's very little throughput. Storage isn't really that expensive, but bandwidth is and Backblaze is only cheap if you aren't trying to get at your data regularly. That's fine for backups because hopefully you never need them.
EDIT: I should say that for an individual user, getting data out of Backblaze isn't that expensive, but it's more expensive than cold storage. I think they charge $.01 per GB transfered, so a 10GB movie would cost you about ten cents to stream. It would cost you $100 to recover a 10TB backup from Backblaze (though for a fee than can mail you some of that on a hard drive, I think).
Well, I was referring to the book Hyperion rather than the whole series. I actually wouldn't necessarily recommend any of the sequels to Hyperion. They are fine, but forgettable and as hard as they try, they just don't recapture the big ideas of the first.
So for me it's Hyperion > Dune, but probably Dune Chronicles > Hyperion Cantos overall, especially in terms of ideas because I never warmed to Herbert's style.
Hyperion is a bit uneven, but I wouldn't call it dense. It's deliberately exploring different literary genres, some more successfully than others, but I'd never call it difficult reading. Dune can be a real slog at time and there are parts when I'm not even clear who's saying what.
Hyperion is one of my favorite books. It's uneven, but very good. I've read the whole series and after the first one they are fine, but nothing to write home about. You can easily stop after the first book if you want something else.
Dune's complete series is worthwhile, but I don't really care for Herbert's writing style. The universe is very rich and the series explores some of the great ideas in science fiction, but it's like an RPG sourcebook masquerading as a novel to my tastes.
I'll also pitch in Jellyfin+Finamp for a self hosted option. Navidrome is also very good, but if OP is already in the Jellyfin ecosystem, it's a good choice.
Perhaps an unpopular opinion, but I enjoyed Discovery and hope you do. It took some big swings and not all of them were hits, maybe even a minority of them were, but I respect the desire to do something new and push the franchise forward and it has some legitimately good stuff.
I would probably pay $80/month for 1 service that had everything guaranteed with no problems.
You're describing cable, and for years we begged for a la carte options to free us from cable packages. I can't fathom going back to paying $80/month for a bunch of crap I'll never watch when I can jump around for a third of that. I'll never argue that what we have is the best solution, but it's a damn sight better than where we came from, at least from a consumer perspective. It perhaps peaked when Netflix was the only game in town with both physical and streaming to get me everything I could ever want for $20/month, but 8 streaming services is still better than shelling out for a cable package.
If you just want the gameplay, Unfathomable from FFG is essentially a clone of BSG in an Lovecraftian setting. Not really what you are looking for, I suspect, but it's probably the closest we'll get to a reprint.
The biggest problem with openness is that anyone can come through the door.
There's nothing stopping them from setting up a stealth instance and doing this now, right? Who's to say any instance isn't already being run by Facebook for data mining?