Same. I tried the official app after sync stopped working and hated it
I of course have a premium account, but anyway I logged into QBDLX (software for downloading from qobuz) which generates log files that contain everything you need to use Qobuz with strawberry. It’s too bad qbdlx can’t playback, and strawberry can’t download, so I use both
Throwing out there that I use qobuz with Strawberry player on Linux and it works great.
My reason for choosing openSUSE was admittedly shallow but I’m here to represent our team!
I remember that one, my dad used to play it when I was a child! I should go dig out the old retro hardware…
Is there a box PC version of the standard edition? Even if it’s just a game code in the box, I like the other stuff physical copies usually come with
I just signed up after seeing an article saying links to the website are being blocked by Instagram (IIRC). I figured it must be worth looking into if they’ve gone that far
Inspector Gadget
Same. Was working a few days ago until the latest build where discord crashes. I’m on openSUSE tumbleweed
Explorer being ridiculously slow even on a fairly fresh install with the addition of popup ads for black ops/MSFS was enough to make me finally jump over the fence a few weeks ago.
I still have to dual boot for certain games and programs but I had enough of windows being my default environment
Finished result
This is a difficult one for me as I grew up with both (started work green leaf & GB pinball as my first Pokemon games) bit I think I agree, explorers of time/darkness was a much better game than any of the mainline Pokemon games were
I used to work while listening to audiobooks so I have come across a lot of this.
It’s not quite what you asked for but what I found was that in general, nonfiction memoirs were my favorite types of books to listen to as it would be ok if you get distracted and they were usually very interesting to me.
If I remember later I’ll check my list of books I’ve read and try to find some good fiction too.
People like to hate on FC5 but honestly it’s my favorite one
Personally I’ve always been a fan of c:
I’ve actually found myself surprised at how my brain doesn’t hear that was weird. I personally find it very natural. Maybe it’s because I was read a lot of stories verbally as a kid?
Elevenlabs is incredible but yeah it’s not there 100% for audiobook purposes I think. I trained it on an audiobook from one of my favorite narrators and had it read from another book. It sounded just like the guy but the intonations and mannerisms just weren’t quite there to match the text.
It’s weird. When there’s just one narrator and they do different voices for different characters I don’t think twice about it but I can still tell the characters apart by voice alone. But when there’s an entirely different person’s voice my attention gets mildly distracted by it. It’s similar to when sometimes books will have a random sentence read out by someone different than the narrator, probably a post recording correction.
That being said it’s usually pretty few and far between when I come across an audiobook book with multiple narrators, and usually it’s per section of the book (maybe from the perspective of different characters) rather than switching mid dialogue between characters
Truthfully, if Lightroom was on Linux, I would prefer to use it, but there’s no denying that dark table is much more powerful than Lightroom and probably any similar software out there