That's cute and all, but it's also pretty much what Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, Spotify and all the other tech giants are doing when they're joyfully tracking what people are doing without their knowledge or consent.
This is because we have a Google home which is linked to my Spotify account.
Cute story... this is an advertisement, even if it was not the author's intent. I enjoy human connection and mawwiage as much as the next guy, but we can have a better story with post-google open source alternatives.
"Will you be my Spotify Duo... til death do us part?" I texted her, over my Google Pixel 3 Watch
sniffle "Of course my love. Nike, Just Do It™" she said, between sips of her new Folger's dark mountain blend with new hazelnut flavor.
"Based, fam"
And then they Uber off into the sunset.
Home Assistant has voice controls, but I have t had a chance to use them. I've heard really good things tho, just waiting on real hardware vs making my own.
[static]
…and that Nuka-Cola Quantum colored sun… [hiss]
…well it sets on the smooth and the unsmooth alike… [static]
…so keep on the sunny side, friend, and choose Big Boss cigarettes for that smooth flavor… [pop]
People downvote for a very wide variety of reasons, many of which don't really have anything to do with the story. For for example, someone might downvote because they don't like posts that are just screenshots from reddit. Or maybe they don't like the brands mentioned in the story. Or maybe they've seen it before and don't want to see it again. Or maybe they're just in a bad mood and are voting harshly. Or maybe it is about the story, and they think its creepy. Or maybe it reminds them of a bad memory.
In any case, it should never be surprising when a post gets some downvotes. The more people who see it, the more likely it is that someone will have some issue with it.
(And of course, complaining about downvotes almost always results in downvotes.)
For me it's my 4-year-old daughter. I know when mom is taking her to preschool because my spooky podcast suddenly changes to something like "SUPER KITTIES" and my audio goes silent.
Could the killjoys and permanently miserable go comment on a different sub? This is a supposed to be a wholesome place. I know Lemmy is filled with perpetually angry people but do you guys have to come here and complain about every detail?
I thought this was adorable and cute. Thanks for sharing OP!
Do people always listen to music? I only do it occasionally to enjoy and stimulate me. I think i saw a study years ago, that always noise stresses your brain out long term, be it street noise or music.
I have a tracking setup for spotify. I listen to music during work most of the day, typically between 11-17 with peaks at 1pm. Average at 40-60k minutes a year. Longest session being around 11 hours.
It helps me focus. But I'd be interested in seeing that study.
A quick google hints that people who always have music on and "fear" silence, do so to avoid negative thoughts or emotions. And the usual studies about constant background noise making you sick. But there's too much noise (lol) about "The perfect music to calm you down" and similiar crap, nothing specific yet. And i have work to do.
Edit: and (a highly technical) one, that reading comphension goes down with background music.
Editedit: sounds somehow agressive. No bad intent. Though i personally like silence.
I'll give you my dilemma:
would you rather have constant noise that is not in your control? or would you rather have constant noise in the form of music that you enjoy? thats my case in school and the case of many others in cities, where its a choice between the sound of crowds (with occasional shocking loud noises) or music you can control. one is far less stressful at the end of the day
I don't know, man... I think it's kind of creepy. I would not want my wife doing this to me. Even though it's innocent, it's still spying.
And what if I decided to sleep in? Would she start getting more and more worried the longer the music wasn't interrupted and then she would call me and wake me up? Then I would both not have been able to sleep in and found out about the spying.
I don't understand what's wholesome about a single household needing to pay for multiple accounts to simultaneously stream, but all the more power to you.
Its a cute story, the tech is only a small part of it. But its actually a good thing for the guy in the story that they can't stream at the same time since it let's them connect in that small way every day
It's funny when i tease my wife by sneaking a song she hates into her playlist from across town even though it's playing on a system hamstrung for profit run by people i despise, yarp!
Maybe, but how is that different from needing to pay for two separate copies of anything else if two people are using them at the same time in different places?
I'm not a fan of how little the major streaming services (except Tidal) pay artists, but they do all offer bundle packages. Spotify's pricing is $12 for an individual, $17 for two people, and $20 for a family of up to 6. So it's only $5 more than the base cost if two people stream simultaneously.
MP3s don't have any of those problems. You just copy it to whatever device you want to "stream" it from and listen to it with no account or subscription.
That's just the name of the device. Unless you're saying that smart speakers, or whatever you want to call them, are inherently not wholesome, which has some merit.