• @MermaidsGarden@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    3310 months ago

    Not to be dramatic but same. For me it was Now, Inbox, then Play Music; the last being the final straw. The replacements for those services being notably worse showed they don’t give two shits about the end user experience. And don’t get me started on the messaging debacle.

    • Tiger Jerusalem
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1710 months ago

      Play Music was brilliant. Now we have that POS named YouTube Music that is impossible to manage your songs, because that turd mixes songs with regular YouTube videos and playlists that have nothing to do with music.

      I have Tidal now, way better than anything else. Screw.you, Google.

      • @lessthanthree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
        link
        fedilink
        English
        310 months ago

        Play Music pulled me away from my alternative sources of music. I used to keep a gigantic library of acquired music. I’m going back to old means now that YouTube music seems to be going down weird routes and adding functions that absolutely do not benefit me. Samples and comments? No thanks.

        Only thing keeping me subscribed is YouTube premium. I watch a lot of YouTube content.

      • @NotYourSocialWorker@feddit.nu
        link
        fedilink
        English
        010 months ago

        Annoying yes but at least these days there’s one check box in the settings that turns off the connection between likes in YouTube and YouTube music.

    • @munderzi@feddit.ch
      link
      fedilink
      English
      810 months ago

      Yes, since Play Music went down I switched to Spotify. Not really happy either but the best alternative for the moment IMO. Also slowly migrating my email to proton.

    • @9point6@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 months ago

      Now, Inbox, Reader and Play Music. Not that it was available in my country, but I think Google fibre was around the same time. I guess you could throw Google Chrome pulling internet standards forward rather than regressing them, into that box too.

      Google was really on to a run of genuine winners at that point, weren’t they? It’s kinda a shame to see that all of the replacements really still are several steps behind what we had.

      I know now that this trajectory almost seems inevitable for any big tech company now, but imagine where we would be now if Google had kept making genuinely good products and improvements.