Is 2 mp3 in the cloud better than one mp3 on your laptop? Let's get into the details and try to find out.


My friend was talking to me about clouds back in 1990, he was referring to "fluffy clouds in the air" by The Orb The song was originally released back in 1990 and, since then, has been a cult tune from the 90s and 2000s.. It was often played in DJ sets featuring trance. Sasha and Nick Warren played it during the 90s. Deep Dish and James Zabiela later performed in the late 2000s. Every so often, it would be heard in the dance music scene once more. It always made my heart content to hear it playing again and again.

I enjoy listening to LPs more if I have the original. However, with this one I have nothing, was not in stores, while I am building my collection. This is an old one that I'm hoping that I can eventually acquire it. If you'd like have a copy of this song saved as mp3 on your phone, I'm sure that no royalties will apply to the song after 30 years. YouTube can be converted into MP3 using these free tools. Copy the URL from your browser or application then paste it into the input box, then press submit to show the various options to download videos.save youtube video The mp3 converter will also be accessible. However, let's return to the main idea of this article. I want to talk cloud and how to store your music there. And then keeping it there.

It is possible to access music that are in the cloud using Amazon and Spotify. In this case, the cloud is the online storage that apps use to play a song. It simply goes online and downloads the song onto your device quickly and plays it for you. Based on the settings you have set obviously, this could be good or bad. If you have a limited amount of data available on your smartphone, you may need to restrict the apps' activities when you have unlimited and free WIFI. Yet most apps will reuse the previously streamed and downloaded music, if you watch it within a timeframe which hasn't yet expired, so there is a very little value in the way they function. I'm always telling HULU that I want to download my TV shows. This isn't just because I'd like them, but rather because my commute home or back to work has many interruptions.


Perhaps I should decrease my commute and work at home. Covid and all the other circumstances dictate it. However, I continue to go back to work because I simply have to escape this crazed house for an hour or two a day... This is where I find myself wondering whether cloud is better for my videos and music? Is having them easily accessible to my mobile device more convenient? One disadvantage is that I can utilize my monthly data more quickly, but it also raises the question of how much music mp3 or MP4 could store on my device because desktops have huge hard drives. Yet on my Samsung Galaxy 10 the storage is stuffed with my personal videos, and so adding another mp3 might require me to delete one of my daughter's latest sweet 15 videos.. I doubt it.. It is where television and music can be stored on the cloud..

What do you think? Cloud? Cloud? Though I'm sure that the future will be bright, for now I prefer a mix of both.