It just didn't make sense. "I'm writing every day" "Haha, just an excuse to not write!"
Hilarious.
I'll take the L and move on, but you can't convince me their comment was any good.
It just didn't make sense. "I'm writing every day" "Haha, just an excuse to not write!"
Hilarious.
I'll take the L and move on, but you can't convince me their comment was any good.
If you're talking about streaming your own music, you could set up Jellyfin and then do all of the work to safely put it behind a reverse proxy and access it remotely.
It's a lot of work though, and you don't get new music. Still, that's about as good as you're going to get if you want a legal FOSS option (others have posted illegal options if you're looking for that.)
I agree.
I liked the simplicity of Audacity, but every change is destructive, so any changes that involve multiple steps are a problem. For example, consider this sequence: 1) remove noise, 2) add reverb 3) change pitch 4) trim ends 5) oh shoot, I want to change reverb settings.
With a full DAW like Reaper, steps 1, 2, and 3 are adding effects but not changing the original audio. So if you want to tweak the settings or remove the effect, it's no problem.
There's many other benefits, but this is the issue that really motivated me to move to Reaper.