• 2 Posts
  • 26 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • Qvest@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.worldMusic Piracy Is Back, Baby
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    5 months ago

    That’s fair, but at least they could say something like “you can download our songs for as long as we allow it” and not “you can download your favourite songs and listen to them any time, anywhere” when that is only partially true, since, if someone has a playlist downloaded (still talking about personal experience) and they go offline for a long period of time, they can no longer play the songs and are required to get an internet connection only for spotify to audit and say “yeah you still have a valid subscription, you can still listen offline”. It’s not truly offline if I have to connect to the internet every once in a while.

    Again, it’s completely fair, but they could at least tell more than half-truths


  • Qvest@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.worldMusic Piracy Is Back, Baby
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    5 months ago

    Not fun is pressing play one day and finding a big chunk of your carefully constructed playlist is “no longer in your library.”

    this is exceptionally true from my experience with Spotify. I had downloaded a playlist that had a specific song. One day I went to play my locally downloaded playlist only to glance over it and see that the song was unavailable. I had the song downloaded. In my device and it still removed the song. No warnings, no nothing. Ever since, I downloaded everything locally and completely ditched Spotify. Fuck this scummy behaviour












  • My comment isn’t really a viable argument but I’ve been thinking about how an advert for Linux would be:

    “The top 500 supercomputers in the world run Linux, don’t you want to feel like having a supercomputer at home? Why wait? Get your Linux for free today!”

    Not really to be taken seriously, but if you want a real argument and example:

    My laptop is really laggy with windows 10, and it came preinstalled with it. Recently I tried dual-booting Linux and Windows, and Windows was simply too slow. I am so accustomed with Linux’s speed that I wiped Windows off it. Never again.








  • I’ve visited the websites of all of the browsers you listed. All of them have the same-ish UI. I don’t really know what a ‘workspace browser’ is so I don’t have nearly as concrete of an opinion as someone that uses one of these daily. But, from the UI alone, they feel like the Opera web browser (they are definitely not the same, and probably serve different purposes but this is the impression I get). Does one of these browsers have more features? Which one do you feel comfortable using?

    Also, unrelated, but can you or someone else explain to me what is a ‘workspace browser’? What purpose does one of these serve?