You can edit the title…
Totally fine. Mostly DIY, but it’s easy.
Maybe I’m being dumb and forgot that I paid $9 for the 9 songs on the album. You’re right.
This guy anals.
Ha, I found this the other day and thought it was neat… And turned it off after 30 minutes.
Yes. It’s like $9 for a perpetual release. I used Amuse.io before, but they suck you in and hit you with fake fees after you’re on their service.
I release music. I use a low cost platform for distribution. There are free ones. I understand your position because I feel similarly.
I never expect to make money or get recognized, but I think my music is good enough to share. To do that, you need a distributor and to be on the major platforms.
Look into Soundrop. You can also put your stuff on bandcamp for free, but at least get it out as widely as you can.
Apprendi español primero. Depois aprendi português com meu irmão adotivo. Japanese is my worst, English is my best because I use it the most.
All. Spanish, Portuguese, and English. Japanese in college.
Definitely food. And dental hygiene.
Checking it out. I don’t think it’s directly related to my question, so I edited my post, but this seems cool.
Digging the proverbial hole with the shovel. (now, double down, OP.)
Neal Stephenson predicted this (of course). Google, reddit, and others in the cohort are effectively ‘shallow web,’ easily searchable and manipulated by SEO. As such, you get 10-15 sites with all the same content, reducing the quality of your searches and the overall quality of web content.
It’s an effort to get clicks and monetize.
There’s no coming back from it.
That’s in your head. I cannot think of anything Firefox won’t do for me. And if I came across something I needed chromium for, I would open it that one time. My privacy is worth that tiniest bit of effort.
As an independent computer consultant full time, I operate heavily through my browser for a good 60% of my work.
Toosh