Spyke

Paid calculator apps.

Not only are many of them paid - but they are subscription as well. Imagine paying a monthly fee for your goddamn calculator.

233
lengaureply
midwest.social

I have mixed feelings here. I legitimately paid ($1, once, a decade ago) for a calculator app and feel it was a great value (I still prefer it to this day). But then again the free version was fine too and the one-time payment was essentially a donation to the developer for a great app that unlocked... Themes...

102
garretblereply
lemmy.world

Yeah, I paid for PCalc because someone put in effort to make it, and it’s good. Don’t feel bad about that.

But I wouldn’t subscribe to one.

53
talreply
lemmy.today

F-Droid has an Android port of the Unix maxima, which is a whole free and open-source computer algebra system, that handles all my heavier lifting. And I'm pretty sure that every phone that I've ever seen ships with at a software package that can act as a five-function calculator, if someone is just looking for something simple.

9
sh.itjust.works

Money laundering? Or just going kids download on devices with their parents data to go unnoticed for months at a time?

13
Wispy2891reply
lemmy.world

They 100% bank on people forgetting cancelling

Also, Apple gave iOS a default calculator just a few months ago. When I had an iPad I had to download dozens and dozens of calculators to find one that didnt have ads or subscriptions

Edit: I meant iPad. They sold iPads without the calculator from launch until Q4 2024

3
ebolapiereply
lemmy.world

Is it not the same OS? I had one iPhone and came back to Android.

1
Blisterexereply
lemmy.zip

apple brands them as totally seperate os's but basically ipadOS is just ios with some extra features and different default apps.

One of those differences was the lack of a calculator on ios until recently.

1

I paid for the pro version of HiPER calc, well worth it as I use it daily.

4

Pretty sure I paid for some Ti and HP calc emulators at some point. Only a couple bucks each, worth it at the time. Would not pay to subscribe though.

2

Calculator emulators are the way. Wabbit for ti-84 and similar, and hp prime (official) for a full CAS.

2

In a sense this is great news. If you ever need to earn some money (somehow, anyhow) you now know that there are people out they who willingly pay a subscription for their calculator.

2

After a long time of using CalcES on my android phone and cheating the ads away with PiHole, I finally spent the very little fee for the pro edition. The app is amazing and the creator absolutely deserves it.

2
lemmy.ml

90% of b2b software. They literally charge thousands of dollars while giving the worse piece of shit software you've ever used.

162
MajorHavocreply
programming.dev

Oof. Yes!

The proprietary cloud crap usually has worse or non-existent documentation, fewer features, and a terrible or non-existent API.

But it comes with a salesperson. So there's that.

But people with cloud server orchestration skills are terrifyingly expensive right now, so self-hosting a better product can be a very hard sell.

40
lemmy.world

Hmm really? Would proficiency with Terraform and knowledge of the services offered by at least one major cloud provider be considered "cloud server orchestration skills" or do you mean something more/different?

6
MajorHavocreply
programming.dev

Yep! My best guess is that maybe 1 in 10 organizations currently has any in-house orchestration skills on staff at all.

(I'm just annecdotaly guessing based on my professional network, which is actually heavily biased towards organizations that have orchestration skills, but also based on job offers that my peers with orchestration skills are seeing.)

And the ones that have it get to charge a premium for shitty cloud services to the ones that do not.

4

That's pretty crazy, good to know. We had a hard time hiring a "cloud engineer" last year ourselves, though for the client in question we were looking for deep Azure chops. I've been learning some Terraform for this reason so we can respond a bit better, sounds like I might be well served to focus on it. Feel like DM'ing with salaries / offers you've been hearing about, if you have?

2

The Salesperson is incredibly important. They take the person responsible for making the purchase decision out to lunch and for rounds of golf, after all!

2
Jimmycakesreply
lemmy.world

They always want to charge per user too instead of just charging a monthly fee. They'd rather have no money than not charge per user it's actual crazy. Imagine any other industry turning away paying customers when it doesn't cost them anything to have the customer. Software companies are insane. Can't wait until their funding runs out.

38
harkreply
lemmy.world

Per user licensing is nothing compared to the ridiculousness of per cpu licensing.

26

Enterprise Linux distros, enterprise (Oracle-owned) database management systems, etc.

6
mennyreply
lemmy.world

Unfortunately, at work we use a bunch of Finite element modelling software and all of them have that type of licence.

3
Jimmycakesreply
lemmy.world

All of the SaaS I looked at would not be a situation where the end employee would generate tickets. Only I as the owner would and even then the software is kind of set it and forget it for my use case which I made clear to the salesman. Many of them to their credit did kick it up the management chain to get a different quote. Only 1 company out of four or five went for it.

The problem I've run into is SaaS companies typically white collar companies who are used to paying per seat where employees generally make 6 figures, where as my blue collar company is full of dozens of part time employees where the per seat model breaks down.

2

Yah me too, for my small company per seat pricing is really painful. For some services we just have one account and share access; only one person logs in at a time and tells everyone else when they’re done.

2
lemmy.world

Sometimes the value add is security, sometimes scaling or uptime. Enterprise considerations aren't necessarily the same as for individual consumers.

Sometimes it's just a dogshit product though, and the sales team pulled the wool over some execs eyes.

14
slazer2aureply
lemmy.world

Sometimes the value add is security

Bahahahahahahahahhahahahahahah

4
lemmy.world

In this case it’s not “security”, it’s offloading the responsibility of security to a 3rd party.

If the enterprise app leaks data, they’re the ones responsible. Not you, the IT guy who chose it

7
jimmuxreply
programming.dev

Enterprise software/services/consulting in a nutshell. It's all just shifting responsibility.

3
Godnrocreply
lemmy.world

Oh fuck yeah! So much of my research into new tools is just checking to see if they have a demo, documentation, and price.

When I'm looking for a new tool, I don't have the time to schedule a "quick" 20 minute call to do introductions and schedule a follow-up hour long meeting followed by a quote sent over in an email days later only to find out the price is so far outside the range there is no way it's ever going to happen!

I'm not some useless middle manager looking for any excuse to look busy; I don't have that kind of time to waste!

13

Sometimes. Sometimes whatever executive demanded we use this doesn't want to hear about it and will throw you under the bus because otherwise it would be their fault.

3
sh.itjust.works

it's not an entire app but, discord profile decorations.

The fact it costs money isn't surprising, but the amount of money charged is hilarious.

17$ for some graphics that some look like they took about 20 minutes to make. Just to make your profile look different than everyone elses. Then the "discount" given for having nitro for it is even more laughable.

Whats equally insane is that people fall for it. I know some people that have easily spent 60$ on profile decorations. Spending equal or greater than the cost of discord nitro is insane to me, even if the decoration doesn't expire.

112

The thing that I find insane is having to pay for Nitro to have an animated .gif as your profile pic.

...The animation is played client-side, so literally costs Discord nothing to do this, and as a matter of fact it's actually more effort for them to intentionally block animations from playing until you pony up than just letting the browser container the app runs in natively do its thing. Given that the Discord app itself is basically just a glorified webview container with some stuff bolted onto it.

32

I don't want to sound like I'm on Discord's side (I dislike nitro too), but that's honestly just how a lot of paid add-on features on free apps work. They take away some functionality from the free one to incentivize people to pay.

5
Psythikreply
lemmy.world

On a similar note, skins and other cosmetics in video games that do nothing to help with camouflage—or worse—make you stand out more. Never understood why people waste money on that.

8

Early days of of micro-transactions did help you blend in more, but I noticed they started diverging away, leaving the more natural camos to be unlocked by gameplay, and the obnoxious/distracting ones as a premium.

4

Difference is that that shit sometimes looks cool as hell and you see your skin constantly while playing(at least if you play in third person). You won't stare at your profile picture for hours.

3

I can see that for a free game that you enjoy a lot, and want to reward with some money. You can make a donation, or get a silly skin for the same money (and have it visible that you donated some).

1

Also how discord dœs stickers . Like custom emojes , they're tied to discord servers , unless you have nitro then you can use them everywhere . Such BS system , shoulda done them how LINE dœs them : you only need to buy the sticker pack once then you use them anywhere , no shitty subscription needed !

2
alaphicreply
lemmy.world

Holy fuck, as if I needed more reasons to hate Discord... back when I thought it was just a new iteration of xFire I still hated it but could at least see a purpose for it, but it doesn't even do all the shit xFire could

2

Xfire was the shit. I'd have paid a couple bucks a month for it, instead of it just dying. It was so crazy ahead of its time. Text chat, voice, game detection and tracking, clans, server browsing, broadcasting, pic and video hosting...

2

And the animations on them are so obnoxious I actively add custom CSS to remove them.
Vencord FTW

1
lemmy.world

Not useless as such but a wallpaper app or something that expects you to pay £5.99 a month to use. Fuck all the way off with that

106
Graphyreply
lemmy.world

Didn’t MKBHD launch some wallpaper app for $12 a month? I heard about it and just figured he was another tech YouTuber who lost touch

36
Thalesreply
sh.itjust.works

He then follows up that face plant by getting caught going 85 MPH in a school zone. MKHB is crashing out hard.

26

Pretty sure he lives in New Jersey, the rest of America doesn't know he was being passed while in that school zone. Driving is different up there

8
lemmy.blahaj.zone

He did actually do a really good honest apology for that, restructuring pricing and improving on the app, but then he did the thing of the commentor above me, which was worse.

6
weeeeumreply
lemmy.world

How could you possibly apologize for charging $12 A MONTH for wallpapers!?

5

watch face app, Facer I think is like this. and still bombards you with ads and banners.

4
lemmy.world

I recently tried out an "LED banner" (called LED scroller in the google play store) app that lets you scroll text on your screen. Pretty cool, I would totally pay $5 or maybe even $10 for it. In the free version, I don't think I've ever seen that many ads in such a short period of time. The paid version was $15 PER WEEK. That's $780 per year. To scroll some text. It's the only app I've ever bothered to post a review for.

96
cashskyreply
sh.itjust.works

Sounds like a front for either blatant adware or malware with botted reviews/downloads to bring it to the top in search results. I can't image there isn't a free app that does this.

26

It's just fishing. For every 10 users that notice the deceptive "free trial then bills per week" model, there's a guy who doesn't notice until he's been charged $15 and cancels. And for every ten of that guy, there's a guy that doesn't notice for a month, and for every ten of that guy there's the rare whale who looks at their $700/mo "google bill" and goes yeah that sounds about right.

2

I remember writing one of those using a bitmap font from some Arduino LCD driver program and publishing it for free on the Android store. Someone offered £50 for the source code and I wonder if they're related.

2
lemmy.world

There used to be apps in the iOS app store that were nothing but a big "I'm rich" symbol. They would be listed for some shit like $10,000 in the app store and all they did was,at best, have a button that played a sound to indicate that you were in fact rich lol.

59

Those "I'm rich" apps basically tested the app store price limit which was set to $9,999 (don't know if it's different now). Brilliant idea really.

I put this in the same category as the "Million dollar homepage" where some guy asked for $1 a pixel and hosted a page with the results. Something smart that if it gets enough attention could make someone good money for not a lot of work. And generally something that will only work once as copycats won't be seen to have the same value.

52
superkretreply
feddit.org

I was legit baffled by how such a shit peace of software could become so ubiquitous – until I got to know SAP and realized that Teams isn't even in the bottom half of enterprise software quality.

44
Yakyreply
slrpnk.net

I thought SAP was shit until I worked with Microsoft Dynamics NAV, an ERP from alternate 1990s hell dimension. It has a built-in IDE that uses its own language called C/AL (syntactically similar to Pascal). The only source control is developers' ability to lock files they are working on. And the code editor is worse than notepad. Seriously, it does not allow to select or paste multiple lines, and in general, acts as if each line is it's own textbox. Forget about syntax highlighting or anything else other than black text on white background.

And, AFAIK, if your company needs to customize it, you are required to hire a "Microsoft-certified" NAV developer.

20

Can concur. We have NAV at work and holy fuck it's awful.

On the plus side it has a 16 colour palate.

8

Allow me to regale you with a tale of Sun Identity Manager and XPRESS. A strange mangling of xml and pseudo javascript-esque pile of shit used for identity transformations for disparate systems.

On second thought, let's just not. I'd rather let that PTSD inducing memory slowly fade away, much like SunIDM did after Larry bought them to poach their customer base.

3
sh.itjust.works

Have you tried webex? It’s like teams but on dumb-‘roids, the notifications are shot, the messages always pull your taskbar up, calls always get routed to either the wrong input or output, calls drop half the time… and the list goes on and on…

10

It is not great, but however with WebEx, at least it comfortably runs in the browser without consuming all the CPUs.

4

A someone who has used and supported teams, WebEx Skype and crazy shit I don't even remember anymore, Teams is downright reliable and user friendly.

5
lemmy.world

Oh, you're going to update without notifying me and then not restart?

You truly are the paramount of usefulness, Teams.

8

and then not restart?

I had Teams restart, twice, during an incredibly important meeting with the government, because it updated itself without my consent.

1
Nikeluireply
lemmy.world

The entirety of Office365 has become crap, especially the online version.

6

The online version means I don’t ever have to boot into windows to use all the M365 stuff at work, so it gets a “thanks Microsoft!” from me.

4
lemmy.zip

Full price EA games with F2P-style microtransactions and ads

And this isn't useless, but I can't believe that to rent Photoshop for $20/mo, your creative projects are not your IP...

47
filcukreply
lemmy.zip

Sorry but the same article links to an update that backtracks.
There's just no way this would ever pass without them losing all their business customers, any legality of such disclaimer aside.

10
lemmy.zip

I stand corrected. Still though, it shows that they at least wanted to have this happen, which breaks my trust in them.

4
JcbAzPxreply
lemmy.world

They probably wanted to sell it as AI training data.

2

Yes, that's kind of the point. They wanted to steal every artist that uses their software's work, and then use it (or sell it) to train AI to put those artists out of work.

It feels like the epitome of "short term profits at the cost of long term gain". No one's going to be using your software if you put them out of work. But I guess when you're a monopoly the only direction to go is down.

3

I remember when the iPhone was new and my friend paid money for an app that simulates a mug of beer on the screen so you can pretend to drink it.

That, but the entire genre of those fucking things cuz there are assloads of them now.

44

Novelty apps were practically the majority of what was out there in the early days of Android and iOS. I remember a lighter app, and an electric shaver app.

My favorite novelty app was that marble maze game on iOS that* used the accelerometer. I got really good at finishing those mazes in seconds, which upset my cousin because it was his phone and I demolished all his best times, lol. Only video game I was ever good at.

32

I've never really understood the imitation app developers. Like your first little run of the novelty, sure, makes sense, minimal effort that might pay itself off or even go viral, but why do the imitations think they have the same shot?

7
Dingalingreply
lemmy.ml

And that despite charging for it, they fill many versions of it with adverts, install without asking bloatware and crap paid for by other companies to shove down your throat, and also sells your personal information to (checks) at least 801 third parties.

5

Hey! Those 801 third parties are trusted third parties. All of them were properly vetted when they said they wouldn’t misuse our personal data.

2
lemm.ee

There used to be an app that was a Dragon Ball Z scouter. You could point it at anything with a face and it would tell you a random power level. Apparently mine is 10,550 (I can barely lift a jug of milk).

42
midwest.social

"Power levels" was/is a white supremacist dogwhistle for cryptofascists, as in "Don't forget to hide your (white) power level."

You'd see it referenced on their meme communities on Reddit fairly frequently. At least it was when I still had an eye on what cryptofascists were doing, which I have to say is the best part of Lemmy, not constantly seeing cryptofascist things.

With that app, and that in mind, there's a (completely and mostly jokingly speculative) possibility that it was measuring albedo instead of just randomly assigning numbers. I'm mostly being a miserable cynic bringing it up without evidence tbh.

3

Bit of context for the power level stuff: https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/hide-your-power-level

It only became an alt-right thing because it leaked from /a/ to /b/ and to /pol/, but it wasn't originally alt-right. /w/allpapers always has a "power level" thread running with anime stuff that isn't immediately obvious to the casual observer.

6

Oh, that. Worry not, I'm not a white supremacist (not that I could be, I'm half Pacific Islander half Scottish). It seemed to have a very loose definition of a face, like you could point it at a drawing or an animal and it would work the same. I take it that it was programmed to assign a number to how closely something matched anime pareidolia.

5
lemmy.world

The “pro” versions of common social media apps that remove ads or give you a useless check mark.

27
hmmmreply
sh.itjust.works

I know you are talking about Xhitter.

But I would Donate my Lemmy Instance go get some funny feature xD.

5

I have been creating ad removal patches for 2 apps this week. Revanced is truly amazing

5
feddit.org

The German Dreckstool website (meaning shit tool) hosts a hitlist of shitty tools/software. I don't think it's that popular, but the top/high-scored of the list may be indicative of some of the worst.

26
superkretreply
feddit.org

I googled nr. 1 and watched their promotional video.
Sooooo many buzzwords. From their marketing material, I have literally no idea what the software even does, but I can already tell it's utter shit.

9
Kissakireply
feddit.org

I love marketing that tells me nothing about the product or service. 🤢

7
superkretreply
feddit.org

What do you mean?
It bridges the gap between disparate business units and optimizes synergies across your entire product portfolio!

10

It also has huge images and videos of happy people, so it must be great!

6
S_H_Kreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Outlook should be way higher. I cannot believe how in tarnation I cannot view the reply they gave me if I'm standing in my sent folder. I have to copy past the subject and searchthe mail again on my inbox. And the ficking alerts that don't trigger at friggin all WTF?

4

I hate the sent folder in the first place.

Old outlook had a setting to place sent emails next to the replied to email. That worked for all folders, except the inbox.

In Thunderbird I let it place sent emails always next to the context.

In the new Outlook, after every send, I have to go into sent and move it to the correct folder. (I have many folders for structure of various concerns.)

2
lemmy.world

Crab Rangoon's. I just don't like them. I mean it's just fried cream cheese.

19
lemmy.world

There's a Triad-backed Catonese place near me that makes crab rangoons with actual crab in them. They are fantastic.

2

Well, if it's good enough for the triads, I guess I'm on board I won't ask any more questions...

5
Jarixreply
lemmy.world

Where the crab come into it? Deep fried cream cheese sounds awesome

1
Cocodapufreply
lemmy.world

Fun fact, they aren't called crab Rangoon's because they're supposed to include crab meat. That's called that because when they're folded up on four sides they look a bit like crabs.

1

Microsoft Sharepoint has a Wiki. The Wiki can not generate a table of content.

18
feddit.org

Our shit setup at work, where I am now using two browsers and two email programs because our Jira and Confluence can't be arsed to decently support web standards/Firefox and because Outlook is shit but Exchange has stuff I need Outlook for.

Today was the first time, after yet again something not working - issues on confluence and Jira ticket can't be closed, endless load on Firefox - where I genuinely felt relieved that a very different website for file transfer simply worked. I could open it, click download, and download the file.

It's absurd that I feel this way.

Atlassian is shit for forcing us into the expensive cloud for a shit product. Our Jira and Confluence have plugins, and we pay admin company to integrate more customizations, and it just makes everything worse. The "changes only happen at night" I read from Atlassian is pointless because without notice or announcement stuff breaks anyway, and I have no idea who makes changes and when and what, because nothing is being communicated. Today was the third time we weren't able to add work time to tickets. Let's see when the next time will be.

It's a constant annoyance and stumbling over shit tools.

I have various CSS hacks in place to make Jira and Confluence more usable, but it's still shit. And man their HTML DOM is absolutely horrendous with only generated classes. Most of my CSS hacks use test ID attributes.

Shit Atlassian, shit Jira and Confluence, shit customizations. Annoying Outlook and Exchange.

Man this became a long text and rant lol

Unfortunately, they're not useless but apparently necessary. I don't see us ever moving away from them.

14

I cannot count the number of times I was able to fire off an email with a status update to the PM "JIRA is down, again, I completed XYZ, update your gantt charts, my part is done." I know that they paid a whole team of folks to craft the interrelations of those tasks for a system that hardly ever worked.

3
Dingalingreply
lemmy.ml

Atlassian is shit for forcing us into the expensive cloud for a shit product.

I feel your pain. Or rather, I felt it once and am now freed!

We were big into Atalassian when they announced they were going cloud only. We had on-prem versions of Jira, Confluence and Bitbucket

We pretty quickly said "Fuck that", mostly because we have an on-prem policy for IP protection.

I was pretty happy to spend some time searching for replacements, mostly because it was my job to apply upgrades to these steaming, tottering piles of badly written java horseshit. They looked pretty, but the upgrade process was convoluted and quite often failed terminally. I still think that the difficulty of upgrading the hosted versions was a driver towards cloud only, mostly because it exposed how shite the things were and how many complaints they must have got for offering an on-prem product that was so hard to maintain, despite looking pretty.

I take some pleasure that the Atlassian share price is now half what it was before they did this.

(If anyone was interested; Confluence and Jira were replaced by Youtrack. Bitbucket by Teamcity. Both by Jetbrains, both much easier to upgrade (Teamcity is web-based one-click), and our licencing costs are about half what we paid to Atlassian)

3

Our biggest dependency is on the jira extension for adding work time and doing monthly and yearly worker Abrechnung.

I believe the hope was to be a reasonable migration to cloud, but if course man's issues and a lot of effort. Now we're in the cloud with that.

We wouldn't only need a ticketing replacement. But time, invoice, and lawful worker pay docs.

2

For me, any office apps. Never worked in an office, never wanted to. None of that stuff. Even if it's free, if it gets installed with the distro, it's the first thing that gets tossed.

13

All the free widgets that used to come preinstalled in Android before Google killed them to save the extra $2 of development cost from their yearly interns.

8
leminal.space

Real Debrid

Touted as necessary when it isn't, apparently if you have it you have access to a huge cache that you can use to continue to torrent dead files

The issue is that most files nowadays are torrented anyway, so it's essentially just a 'do it because I told you so' step for torrentio users.

Other torrent streaming software don't even need real Debrid.

6
cashskyreply
sh.itjust.works

Isn't it kind of a middle-man service so you don't get narc'd on by your ISP for large amounts of p2p traffic? That way all your ISP sees is you downloading data from one source rather than lots of.p2p traffic.

Unless you use vpn obviously, that doesn't have issues with p2p traffic or whatever.

8

And in many countries downloading is just fine, sharing isn’t.

And in a torrent swarm you always share (yes there are modded clients, but they’re a niche), making it risky

1
lemmy.world

I discovered it only a while ago and during that time it has been clearly neutered. It just doesn’t work for stuff like it used to.

Most likely copyright strikes caught up to it

3

A few months ago they got told to quit it so they were like "oh shit apparently there are PIRATES using our piracy service. We never wanted THOSE GUYS as our customers!" and started neutering piracy, which was clearly their main source of income.

4

Sims freeplay. Haven’t used it for a long time but it sure asks for a LOT of money for a free game 😂

1

Spotify and apps like it. Imagine paying a subscription to a subpar selection of music when you could just download mp3s. Imagine having skipping a song being a privilege. Are you an abused kid? Is drinking water a privilege too? I paid once for BlackPlayer simply because it's my favorite music player app. The most important features were free.

-16
deegeesereply
sopuli.xyz

What if you want to listen to something you didn’t have the foresight to pirate locally first?

Music streaming is very convenient, even easier than piracy.

32

I agree with you in theory, and in practice for most people. I have weird enough tastes in music though that I haven't found a single streaming service that has what I want.

7
sh.itjust.works

If I like the song, I download it when I have internet or mobile data. I support the creators in other ways if possible. $1 from one fan is the equivalent of like 13 million streams from them. I'm not paying to avoid ten minutes of obnoxious ads every time I want to listen to music. Anyway, they found Like the Wind, and it absolutely slaps so I'll download it on my phone.

3
criitzreply
reddthat.com

How do you play a novel song on demand? How do you find new music you have ever heard before?

6
punkfungusreply
sh.itjust.works

Subpar selection? I can count on the fingers of one hand the songs I have found on other sources but not Spotify.

I don't even pay for Spotify, but I still use it to find new music because it's hands down the best way to do so. I create a playlist of all the new songs I want and then purchase them all when Bandcamp Friday rolls around. I'm getting all the benefits of Spotify without paying them a cent (my ad blocker even works on it too), plus being as supportive as possible to the artists themselves.

11
Manalithreply
midwest.social

What adblocker are you using? I got to the point where on FF with uBlock Origin Spotify just fails and mobile apps are 50/50 with NextDNS

1

uBlock Origin on Firefox has continued to work for me. It doesn't skip the ad, but it does prevent any ad audio from playing so it's just dead air til it's done. It does have the occasional hiccup where it doesn't resume the music after the ad is done, but it's rare enough not to bother me.

I do also have a PiHole but I don't think that's contributing, as it behaves no different away from my home network.

1

I sail the high seas quite often. I also pay for spotify because it's stupid easy.

8
forrgottreply
lemm.ee

Downvoted for hating on Spotify. That's just sad.

I don't care what crap Spotify offers; it's well known they go out of their way to avoid paying royalties to the artists. They're a leech, nothing more, and I will never support them.

6
lemmy.world

Sometimes it does. Piracy drives up sales of traditional media (think: vinyl), as well as increasing crowd size at live performances. Also, merch sales scale with awareness of an artist. All of these things equal the payout of millions of plays on spoffy.

0
sourreply
feddit.org

Except that using spotify does all of that as well.

I'm not saying that spotify is good. But thinking piracy is better for the artist than spotify is delusional.

2
lemmy.world

I'm delusional, then. Spotify hasn't paid me a red cent, but piracy has indirectly put money in my pocket and food on my table.

0

I down voted them for the weird tirade about privilege and being an abused kid. Idk wtf that has to do with hating spotify, but lemmy would look much better without that garbage in the comments.

2

Yeah, on lemmy if you're not constantly deepthroating Xi Jinping's cock, you're practically digesting Spotify's cock.

0
blackn1ghtreply
feddit.uk

Imagine paying a subscription to a subpar selection of music when you could just download mp3s.

Imagine having to go through the hassle of being at a computer and using whatever program you need to use to find the correct songs and then transfering them to your phone, when you could just find the song instantly, no matter where you are.

I used to download tens of thousands of songs back in the day, Spotify is way more convienient, a price I'm perfectly fine paying.

2

I forgot I time traveled to 2006. The politics never changed so I thought I was still in 2025.

Anyway in the future we have a thing called cloud storage where you could upload your whole music folder and download it on any device.

As someone who makes music and listens to my own nonsense, I set a onedrive folder as my default location so I can export an mp3 while I'm showering and getting dressed and download the mp3 on my phone when I'm outside.

2

I like Spotify. I don't often want to listen to an album. I want to listen to a vibe. It's good for that, and for introducing me to new bands and music.

But yeah, if you're just using it to listen to one album at a time, and you know which album you want, then you're using the wrong service.

0

huh? i use boost (and used to use it for reddit before the whole API thing) and haven't ever seen it ask for money or anything

12
swab148reply
lemm.ee

Same, it shows ads, but they're pretty easy to block. I paid for it just to help support the dev, he seems pretty cool.

11
Nibodhikareply
lemmy.world

If you're really the dev, please add support for spoilers, it's the only thing that makes me consider a different app. I've also been using Boost since Reddit, and I have a feeling spoiler tags worked there, but that was long ago and my memory is not that good.

7

Oh shit, what's up? Great app, thanks for all you do!

2

I read your comment, I thought a sec, and I just paid to remove the ads for boost.

Love boost.

3