Scene may also refer to: A scene is an episode in a story. ... In TV and movies a scene is a part of the action in a single location. ... In BDSM, a scene is a complete encounter. ... The Scene is a term used to refer to a collection of communities of pirate networks that obtain and copy new movies, music, and games, often before their public release, and illegally distribute them throughout the Internet (and previously through BBSes). ... The Scene is an episode from Season 1 of the dramedy television series Entourage. ... Entourage is an HBO original series created by Doug Ellin that chronicles the rise of Vincent Chase â a young A-list movie star â and his childhood friends from Queens, New York as they navigate the unfamiliar terrain of Hollywood, California. ... The Scene is a miniseries created by Jun Group Entertainment. ... The Scene are a Canadian rock band formed in Peterborough, Ontario, Canada in 2004, by Matthew Crowley (vocals, guitar), Mark Chamberlain (bass guitar), and Jeff Gutteridge (drums). ... The Scene. ... The demoscene is a computer art subculture that specializes itself on producing demos, non-interactive audio-visual presentations, which are run real-time on a computer. ... Ocean Colour Scene (often abbreviated to OCS) are a rock band from Birmingham, England. ... Changeling: The Dreaming was part of White Wolf Game Studios original World of Darkness role playing game line. ... White Wolf, Inc. ...
A subculture, such as the "punk rock scene" or "gaming scene"
A name used by Japanese Punk guitarist Minoru Kojima.
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The Scene is a term used to refer to a collection of communities of pirate networks that obtain and copy new movies, music, and games, often before their public release, and illegally distribute them throughout the Internet (and previously through BBSes).
These communities are referred to as scenes as well, for example the MP3 Scene, the DVDR Scene, etc. Groups gather in private and IRC channels where they can easily coordinate with other members to "pre" and distribute releases.
Still those scene rules are constantly outdated compared to the actual up-to-date development in encoders and their accompanied settings and compared to modern media's storage sizes because of the rules' strictness and because being updated not as often as the actual software development of the used multi-media software is progressing.