Very cool of you, I was debating the $149 price tag, but at $30 I just paid before I could think of a reason not to.
Quick question: is there a way to use an audio player (e.g., Audacious, RhythmBox, VLC) to stream the music without using a web browser? The animated light curves in the background make the browser use 100% of a whole CPU core, which isn't ideal, especially when using a laptop on battery.
Hey, I'm really digging the Focus music. I was wondering to what headphones are you guys tuning it. It sounds awesome on my studio monitors, but it sounds like crap on my ATH-M50 cans due to the bass going over its limit unless I keep it to a rather low volume.
The joke at my old work was 'basically done'. Meaning they spent a weekend equivalent on a prototype. Management heard 'done' the rest of us heard 'not production ready'.
well generally I think however long the first 80% takes, the last 20% will take 1-2 times that.. but cool that they're working on an android version, I'm patient and can wait. Loving brain.fm it actually works to keep me focused.
Just checked out your site and it is great. The sound is superb and it really helps focusing. Also, your offer is super generous.
However, you only accept credit card payments. I would never give my credit card info to a random site just to read a month from now that they've been hacked.
Is there a reason you are not accepting PayPal or BitCoins? It seems that you are not using one of those big payment processors either.
I just tried it for an hour or so and it does seem great. Bummed on the lack of an Android app though... would've helped me immediately.
Anyway, I read your comments that it is nearly 80% done so I'll give it a shot and signup. The mobile version on Chrome browser works decently well so I think I'll manage with that till then.
Very cool of you guys offering such a big discount. Tried to sign-up, saw the banner (about the discount), chose lifetime subscription (even without trying) but my card still was charged $149.99. ;( Is there a way to fix this? I mean it totally maybe worth it, yet I wasn't ready to spend that much.
Impulse purchased this last night without really knowing what it was but boy was i impressed! Incredible really what you've done here and the developement team here loved it to! Well Played chaps!
I just spent 50 bucks for a yearly subscription to one of your competitors a week ago. My biggest complaint about them is that I can't get a list of tracks that I've really enjoyed and there's no upvote, play more like this feature. I don't care about social "likes" but some songs in an otherwise great playlist are just really grating and throw me right out of the focus window. It would be nice to say "don't play this again"
In the end, to mature in action is to learn that the self is not the author of the act but its witness and its steward. You cannot will yourself into grace any more than you can will yourself into sleep. But you can practice, and you can wait, and you can forgive your own clumsiness along the way. And then one day, without fanfare, you will reach for the glass of water and simply—without thought, without strain, without the ghost of the toddler’s desperate grip—you will lift it and drink. And that small, silent success will be the whole philosophy, distilled.
We begin, as children and as amateurs, in the realm of the overdone. A toddler learning to drink from a cup grips it with desperate force, spilling the milk precisely because he is trying so hard not to. A young lover declares eternal devotion after three weeks, confusing intensity for depth. A novice public speaker memorizes every word, then freezes when a single syllable is forgotten. In these cases, action is still a foreign language—translated awkwardly from intention, full of false cognates and shouted vowels. The actor is not yet at home in the act. action matures
Then comes the middle phase: the paralysis of self-awareness. The adolescent who has learned to be conscious of every gesture becomes incapable of any spontaneous one. Should I hold the door? Is my laugh too loud? Did I nod at the correct frequency? This is the age of performance anxiety, of the yips in the golfer’s wrist, of the singer who hears her own echo and loses the pitch. Action becomes a hall of mirrors. We watch ourselves acting, and the watcher strangles the doer. Many people remain here for decades, trapped in the amber of over-reflection. In the end, to mature in action is
What distinguishes mature action from mere habit, however, is its suppleness. A habit is a rut; a mature act is a river. The habit-driven person brushes his teeth the same way every morning and becomes agitated when the routine breaks. But the person with mature action—let us call him the craftsman of his own behavior—can adjust in real time. He can be interrupted and resume without frustration. He can improvise within the form, like a jazz musician who knows the chords so well that he can play the notes that are not written. And then one day, without fanfare, you will
But maturity—true maturity of action—arrives when the knot ties itself. The pianist who has practiced the Chopin nocturne for ten years no longer thinks “now finger four on G-sharp.” Instead, she thinks the sadness, and the fingers find their way. The surgeon in the trauma bay does not run through a checklist of anatomy; she sees the wound and her hands move like water finding a crack. This is not instinct, which is animal and innate. It is —a cultivated spontaneity that looks like instinct but is actually the ghost of ten thousand repetitions.
The deepest secret of mature action, though, is that it often looks like hesitation. The elder diplomat pauses before answering a provocation—not because he is slow, but because he is letting the first three unwise replies die in his throat. The experienced parent waits ten seconds before responding to a toddler’s tantrum, allowing the storm to peak and begin to subside on its own. To the untrained eye, this looks like inaction. But it is the highest form of action: the deliberate withholding of action until the moment when action will actually work.
We have a word for action that has not matured. We call it knee-jerk . It is honest but clumsy, forceful but misdirected. And we have a word for action that has aged too long into non-action. We call it paralysis . Mature action lives in the vanishing point between these two failures. It is the place where speed and slowness become indistinguishable—where the archer releases the arrow not when he decides to, but when the bow decides for him.
I'm a little late to the party. I bought the lifetime license from an earlier link that had it at $40.
My question is, is the tremolo/pulsating nature of the chords (sort of sounds like a helicopter) on most of the music a side-effect to the AI generated sounds, or is this by-design? If by-design, are there settings I could tinker with? If not, feature request. :)
I'm starting to find this a bit unnerving after extended periods, but it could be a personal preference.
Previously I was cleaning cookies / local storage (to have more free sessions). Then I downloaded MP3 and created playlists. At $29 I have no other option but to buy it... HURRAY!
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brain.fm is like matrix, I admit!
Here's an exclusive deal on the lifetime membership for the next 24 hours.
It's a $29 deal (or 80% off) for the lifetime membership. Our best offer :)
Link: http://brain.fm/HN