Mind explaining this?
- 14 Posts
- 13 Comments
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•If you’re in the market for a $1,900 color E Ink monitor, one of them exists now - Ars TechnicaEnglish8·4 days agoThis device runs android, but it’s pretty close https://shop.boox.com/products/tabxc
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOPto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What shows/movies are absurdly stupid but fun to watch with friends?4·5 days agoMy top series for this is “Hi-sCool SeHa Girls”, a 3D anime about three Sega game consoles who have been anthropomorphised into highschool girls. they go on adventures inside of lesser-known sega branded games, and the episodes are a mix of legitimately funny visual gags, good storytelling, bad storytelling, and both decent-quality cgi and extremely low-quality video editing. It’s the most fever-dream-like show I’ve seen.
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Which programs and apps do you avoid updating?3·5 days agoDeezer, because I maintain a usertheme based on an old version of the website so I use on old build of the app as reference.
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Even PewDiePie thinks you should install Linux on your computer after saying he was "tortured by Windows"English4·6 days agoAh you’re right, I got the neofetch showcases mixed up.
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.world•Even PewDiePie thinks you should install Linux on your computer after saying he was "tortured by Windows"English09·6 days agoIt’s mint with hyprland
Even when I had only used windows, windows issues are so opaque, and the microsoft forums sucks. sometimes, the only advice anywhere is a “microsoft representative” saying to run sfc scannow and when that doesn’t work, you’re on your own.
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOPto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Any Android tablet suggestions for note-taking?2·16 days agoI have also been looking into that. Would you say it is better than a tablet for you? I love the smaller size and focus on writing, but since it’s around $200 more expensive than a comparable tablet I’m not sure whether I should get one.
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Is there still an effort to move technical help threads from Redshit to here?4·21 days agoYou could just use libredirect to redirect to redlib
Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What music streaming platform do you use?1·1 month agoOver the past couple of months, I have tried out all the major streaming services as I moved away from Deezer, so I will give an overview of my perspectives on each.
Deezer
I used Deezer for the past five years, and for most of that time I loved it. In the past year they did a UI and branding overhaul which I didn’t really like, but it was fine. They have recently been getting more into music quizzes and games, which I am not very interested in. There was a big banner for games on the home screen at one point, but I ended up blocking it with UBlock Origin. I ended up leaving Deezer because they removed the option to sort downloaded music in any way. (I think they have added that back now)
Deezer has a fantastic range of curated playlists and radio stations, some of the best out of any service I have used. It has quality generated playlists and mixes, and good algorithmic discovery.
Deezer seems to favour playlists; Your favourited playlists show in the sidebar at all times and there is no option to change this, I only listen to albums, so I don’t really like this.
They have a public forum for discussing Deezer and reporting incorrect artist catalogues.
In my time of using Deezer, I have noticed many annoying bugs and changes on Android, like when they temporarily removed the option to sort downloaded music and an ongoing bug where downloaded music isn’t playable offline.
I can’t figure out if they have a connect feature. Someone in this thread said they do, but I’ve never seen it.
The unofficial Linux app is just a basic electron wrapper.
Apple Music
Apple Music is a good streaming service, but it was a terrible experience to set up on Linux. I spent six hours trying to create an Apple account only to get stuck at a page where a button didn’t have any JavaScript attached to it, so it didn’t even let me.
Very infuriating, anyways, Apple Music doesn’t have an official Linux app, but the unofficial app https://cider.sh/ exists, and is the only fully-fledged app for a major streaming service that I know of on Linux. The app is impressively feature-rich, featuring connect, custom audio profiles, a fullscreen mode and miniplayer, real-time lyrics, and a plugin/theme store among many other things.
While the UI looks very nice and is customizable to an extent, there are many actions that require an extra click, such as favouriting an album, or editing a playlist, as many things are tucked away in menus. This, along with the excruciating account creation process is what led me to not choose Apple Music as my service of choice.
Discovery is good, although maybe not as good as on Spotify, Deezer, or Tidal, and the selection of curated playlists is less then what’s available on other services.
I have noticed UI bugs and inconsistencies, but nothing that largely detracts from the user experience.
Tidal
Tidal is pretty similar to Qobuz, and I don’t have many bad things to say about either of them.
It has all the features you would expect in a streaming service, and it does all of them pretty well. It has good algorithmically generated playlists and discovery, a clean, simple interface, and I’ve experienced no bugs. I don’t think it has anything like Spotify Connect.
The unofficial Linux app is an electron wrapper, but it does have some additional functionality that the official apps do not. Another unofficial GTK app also exists, called High Tide. Tidal is the service I ended up choosing personally.
Qobuz
Out of these, Qobuz is the one I have the least experience with. It seems pretty similar to Tidal in most regards, but seems more aimed towards audiophiles and has less automatic curation, and the manually curated playlists have are focused on a much narrower range of genres and artists, but are far more detailed and in-depth than any other service. The interface may also be nicer depending on your tastes, although it doesn’t have a lyrics view.
Qobuz is mostly known for allowing you to purchase music to download at full quality, which is pretty awesome.
The unofficial Linux app is a basic electron wrapper, but it doesn’t MPRIS support.
It’s free on tubi!