tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post7705743359460391343..comments2024-03-14T08:29:28.786+03:00Comments on Touhou lossless music collection: Why do we need a database-based filesystem.rwxhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11961724108899856582noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-74448288834234256872023-07-19T17:52:55.268+03:002023-07-19T17:52:55.268+03:00Bruh does anyone her have the seed for this album?...Bruh does anyone her have the seed for this album? 東方想幽森雛 (Touhou Such A Mystery)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-74276682412755192982021-12-10T00:24:56.667+03:002021-12-10T00:24:56.667+03:00It's a shame I didn't look at this until n...It's a shame I didn't look at this until now. I've actually been working on-and-off on kind of a similar idea on my own for the past several years. My goal was to organize a large collection of image files; for example, a collection of comic scans, or loose one-off drawings from various artists. Ideally you could type some kind of search query in a text box and the database would return all files/subcollections that match it. Instead of using a FUSE module I wrote a client-server system and a custom file browser.<br />I've figured out that unless you have some reliable source of metadata, it quickly becomes unmanageable for an end-user. Right now my collection has half a million items. Imagine adding meaningful tags to each of those. Instead, what worked for me was to realize that well, unlike a normal file system the user is not ever going to be changing the contents of these files, so if the user "copies" this file from here to here, there's no reason to actually do such a thing. The files that are displayed in the browser can just be links to the data, and copying a link just creates a new link to the same datum. Then you can keep the old hierarchical system of files and directories, and have duplicate links to the same file in different directory structures that organize the same files by different criteria. E.g. one by author/genre/title, and another by genre/author/title. The only disadvantage being that it's not dynamic. Meaning, new entries have to be organized explicitly.<br />I've been using my system for 18 months and it works quite well. In fact I'm working on version 2.0 already, where I'll apply some of what I learned on version 1.0.Helioshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15935799885807930437noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-40054931305139422942021-10-23T21:22:45.523+03:002021-10-23T21:22:45.523+03:00Was this supposed to be funny? Sadly, it was just ...Was this supposed to be funny? Sadly, it was just utterly inane.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-66497371473377856182021-10-16T00:52:51.353+03:002021-10-16T00:52:51.353+03:00sql is cringe kys jksql is cringe kys jkhezuiknnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-32330915066451124892021-09-05T07:43:34.529+03:002021-09-05T07:43:34.529+03:00Please add the following files on TLMC V.20...
[S...Please add the following files on TLMC V.20...<br /><br />[SWING HOLIC]<br />・SOUND HOLIC VLOL.13~16 [SWHC-0013~0016]<br />・COOL JAZZ TOHO I・II [SWHC-1002・1003]Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12734905846097917426noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8200259307795996652.post-11600120246081838302021-08-25T07:28:19.452+03:002021-08-25T07:28:19.452+03:00amenamenblueforesticarushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06409192644744804443noreply@blogger.com