• lyralycan@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    For me it was Spotify. Their radio mixes were far too repetitive and I got sick of hearing the same songs so I shopped around, and I found out Tidal offers higher quality streaming at a lower price. Extra bonus: Tidal’s radio mixes are far more diverse. Small caveat: not everything is on Tidal; some albums missing, some artists don’t publish to it because Spotify and iTunes are the forerunners with most tech manufacturers supporting them natively (such as the Spotify integration in Bose hardware), whereas Tidal maintains the audiophile niche (only integrated with Sonos and Bang & Olufsen I believe).

    • Benchamoneh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      I really want to move to Tidal, cheaper and better quality audio. I just wish they’d implement smart speaker support as that’s the only blocker for my family.

      Sure I can load up the app, play a song and select the speaker as a pkayback device, but for the rest of my house this is either too much effort compared to saying “play x”, or they’re minors without phones.

      • lyralycan@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        I agree, it would be nice.

        Last I checked it’s a mess. When I had Nest Audio speakers, Google’s given reason for not integrating Tidal was Tidal’s lack of playback API. Meanwhile Music Assistant for Home Assistant is entirely capable of using Tidal API, or at least masquerades as a client. But yeah, the best solution for Tidal is using Sonos speakers and choosing music in either the Sonos app, or the Tidal app via casting, and the only voice support is through Amazon Alexa but I think only the USA has that add-on enabled.