Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 459824036827103233
atleast my music isn't DRM
and I can listen to CC, and other shit not usually available
make my own music too
have way more functionality
buying individual tracks is cheaper than streaming, unless you buy 2 full ambums each month
how is buying individual tracks cheaper than streaming
spotify is like $5/month
Streaming is good if you listen to wide range of stuff
These days I only need to have my weeb shit locally
welp, for me, that's $10 a month
just be smart wiyh your music and you can get up to 75% off, while 50% isn't uncommon
400 tracks would equal 20 months of streaming. If you have space for 4 months ($40), it'd mean 2 years of streaming
and if you're a DJ etc. with more than 1000 tracks, what the fuck are you doing? are you seriously playing spotify quality with the chance of the siftware not even supporting spotify? and if you can't repay for a reason? literally your whole career...
and I gave othr points of why I won't use it
spotify offers discount to almost every working person
ok, make it 40 months
or 4 years
I got 500 tracks for $50
a lot not even on Spotify
>buying tracks
>streaming
i get all my cds from ali
^ this guy knows his shit
I get all of my clay-made vinyls on aliexpress
They work flawlessly
And I know they do because I'm a fine connoisseur of avant-garde alternative music
tbh that's actually unironically a good idea, cd's from ali
we were talking about it some months ago, some dude was getting vaporwave casettes from ali
I remember some guy actually posting his cassette haul from ali
Not sure if it's the same dude you're talking about
we're living in 2018
fyi
>not at least hoarding cassettes for investment reasons
This cycle will end and a new one will emerge
you do know that cd's and cassettes don't lose data from background radiation right? i honestly hope you have a cold storage for your archived data like lead-lined hard drive enclosures or dvds
same reason why people use silver cables in audio
Well, cd's can lose data just by the dye or glue layers eating through the silver/data layer itself
It's happened with a lot of my older discs.
Then again they've changed formulas later in the 2000's so, it shouldn't happen with any newer CD's.
Background radiation won't do shit to them, though.
They're optical storage, not magnetic.