Skip Navigation

InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)WH
Posts
2
Comments
174
Joined
2 yr. ago

Permanently Deleted

Jump
  • 3 months ago I cancelled Spotify, following yet another price increase. I went to Tidal for the 2 month trial, and another month full price.

    This month I cancelled Tidal, following their deprecation of Plex integration, my finding a couple tracks with bad meta data, and some other here-and-there’s where the service was lackluster.

    I’m current on Apple Music.

    I like that Apple Music has lossless, like Tidal did. The Apple Music algo seems a bit better so far, even comparing to Spotify or the last time I tried Apple Music (~3-4 years ago). And, one of the things I didn’t know I wanted, music videos for my morning jam time, are better with Apple Music.

    I imagine I’ll be staying here for a while.

  • I was an efficiency whore while working management at a big software company.

    It sucked in some very specific ways. I didn’t even realize the impact until after I left that environment.

    There were some good things from corporate America, too, but they didn’t bring real ultimate power happiness.

  • In my rural area’s 50 mile radius, there are just gas stations with to-go bags. The gas stations are, at best, convenience stores.

    I uninstalled the app after seeing it was just an advertising opportunity for those gas stations.

  • Alternatively, if they are happy with their pro-grums, familiar with the interface, and not getting gouged worse than the next cable subscriber — consider letting it rest.

    From things like being able to punch in a channel number to having the cable company to call for issues, folks in that generation might really prefer paying.

    I’m basing this on my years of experience with a now 60-something and now 80-something. YMMV

  • Apple urges developers to not use DeviceCheck for anything beyond basic device verification, and if you're a developer that's also misusing it, then you should definitely cease that—there are probably more reliable ways to check whether it's the same user trying to access an account from a device or not.

    I don’t think I care about not being able to erase the device ID. It seems useful to have this, actually, for back-tracing if need be.

    Snapchat probs shouldn’t use the DeviceCheck services improperly. But hey, that’s just like my opinion, man.

    More, not very interesting, info on DeviceCheck services here: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/devicecheck

  • Similar - I signed up for my Spotify account with a VPN, as it was only available in Europe / UK / something like that. Have been paying for as long as I can remember.

    With our family account, we had a house account, wife, mother, grandmother, and myself. In reality, only 2 of those accounts really got used.

    The family verification emails were definitely annoying. But the yearly price hike with few important feature improvements, combined with things like audiobooks being for the primary account only, caused me to re-eval.

    Now, my wife is on a student plan on Spotify, and I’m trialing Tidal. I expect to stick with Tidal based on lossless and higher pay for artists. If I don’t, I’ll likely swing over to Apple Music. Switching and migrating playlists is pretty painless, overall.

    In any case, I’m glad I’m out of that abusive relationship with Spotify.

  • My thoughts exactly. I gain almost nothing with this design change, as compared to keeping the current or similar-to “bar” form and folding out from there.

    I’m starting to have visions of Zoolander and his ridiculously small cell phone..

  • I just switched from Spotify to Tidal, and am enjoying lossless audio. We'll see if I stay or go here.

    It’s fun to try a new algorithm, too. I used SongShift to transfer my tracks and playlists (have been using that app for 5 years or so now).

  • I think you hit the nail on the head.

    Where you live is one thing, but how you face the world is another. As we age, it seems that we have increased challenges in the areas you note.

    Trust becomes harder. Acknowledging our own faults and cognitive degradations becomes harder. Making decisions becomes harder. And desire to remain autonomous becomes stronger. Those things don’t jive too well.

    One more thing to add: maintain a community of similarly-aged peers. Otherwise, one might feel like they are on an island.

    This is based on my experience caring for an elderly family member.