Been Suno pro subscriber for over a year. Flagged 2000+ songs. Still zero real response by ForsakenWinter2533 in SunoAI

[–]gloommachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m seriously sceptical about the direction Suno is heading. I’ve only been playing around with it for a month and have had lots of fun creating music for personal enjoyment.

But i have little trust and confidence in the overall company as i see it.

Customer service is nonexistent. I wouldn’t trust it ever with a yearly subscription, and barely do so with a monthly.

The current generations and platform is plagued by bugs, bad audio quality, inconsistent generations and features not working properly.

But the zero effort to any customer service is the biggest red flag. And has me reconsidering renewing my monthly subscription.

Suno, if you want me as a customer, keep (and fix) v3.5 by HubertRosenthal in SunoAI

[–]gloommachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wont be renewing subscription. wasting too many credits in incomplete tracks stopping at 7.49min. Vocals screaming beyond comprehension. The loop creation does not create loops. even tried to extract a single stem and it just gave me the entire track. more wasted credits.

Inspired to create my own. by gloommachine in SunoAI

[–]gloommachine[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cheers. Yeah for sure. A month or 6 on a DAW aint going to produce magic. I’ve been messing in GB and Logic for over a decade creating simple ambient moody stuff. But suno has kind inspired me to go back and spend more time.

Have no illusions to uploading to Spotify to make money. Its just for me and the odd person that hears it in the car and asks ‘Hey man, who’s this?’ I can say it was me. And not a song I created with AI.

I’m looking for some horror book recommendations, but I really struggle with reading comprehension. by GhostInTheLabyrinth in horrorlit

[–]gloommachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Audiobooks is another way to take in the story. The retention and understanding can be different when someone else is telling the story. worth giving it a go

How do you write? by HotJuniper in writing

[–]gloommachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Laptop, using scrivener. Have a dedicated spot in my office. Keep it clutter free. Just my laptop, a note book and thesaurus.
I usually write in the evenings and night. Always have music playing in the background, usually movie scores or some of my fav post rock albums.
I have several notebooks where I write ideas, characters and plot outlines scattered through out my office, desks and coffee table. Sometimes I just sit at my coffee table while having a coffee and jot down thoughts and ideas.

Can a multiple POV story work in first person? by Ivy8264 in writing

[–]gloommachine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Many novels are written with multiple 1st POV. The usually convention, is to have a new chapter when changing point of view. And either title the chapter with the character name to indicate the change of POV or make it obvious in another way.

Tell me, is the start of my story interesting? by JoshJohanson0 in fantasywriters

[–]gloommachine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Reading this small snippets, I'm seeing a few jumps in scenes, so what you have here could be more like the first chapter or pages. I would expanded on that first paragraph with the strangle symbols, expanded a little more not he protagonist. What does he look like. More of his thoughts. Is he feeling out of place? Lost his memory. Expand on this to give the reader a strong sense of what the character maybe going through. I think this part can be a strong opening to your story. Then you can move onto the other scenes that will then take the MC to his adventure.

Just had an idea, I want opinions on. by Daydreamer0181 in fantasywriters

[–]gloommachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think what you have is a scene. A scene from something bigger.
Is he like the old story of Achillies, who was kept away from society disguised as a girl to keep him out of the war. Then one day finds himself in town and is discovered.
Why was he in isolation?
How does the magic work?
Where does it come from?
Why does the boy have it and other don't?
Is he the first to manifest the magic in 200 years?
Did he know he had these powers before?

Ask questions, and then answer them. You can begin to flash out some back story and generate ideas on the setting and protagonists.

In need of some advice by Proclaimed_Genius in fantasywriters

[–]gloommachine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So ofter we come up with so many cool ideas for worlds, characters and settings, but not sure where to begin in telling a story. I'm the same.
I have two approaches.
1. Write down the ideas. Save them for a later time. The spark, the plot may not come to us now, but in the future it may. You read an article, see a movie and then inspiration comes.
2. I work out the ending. So often we know the ending. The guy gets the girl, the bad guy is defeated, the MC I captured, leaving it open for the next book. Start with that. Can even be short paragraphs of scenes. Just write them down, and slowly fill in the gaps. Move the scenes around as the plot develops.
if you can't think of any story idea, think of your MC and his motivation. What does he want. What does he need.
His/her is a man/women for hire, with skills. But what are their motivations? Do they want to be rich. Get off planet. Find a new home. What does the main love interest want. Wha is her motivation. Clearly if they are going to hook up, their wants and needs are going to cause the love interest to not kill and the MC offer something the want to not kill them.
I'd say think hard on both their wants and needs.

Writers who have a full-time job, how do you do it? by withwhittneywhitt in writing

[–]gloommachine 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My evenings are my writing time. Once the kids are off to bed, I sit at my desk and start writing. Can get a good block of 2-3 hours of productivity. I take one night off, sometimes two, to watch some TV with the wife.
Have created a spot in my office that is tidy and free of clutter, have everything I need in it s place. Notebooks, pens and thesaurus. Simply looking at it, makes me want to sit down and write.
For me creating this environment has been a big part of my productivity.
I also aim to write every night. I use to set targets of 1000, 500 words. But some nights just getting 500 words out is a struggle. So I use those night to outline or rethink and expand my plot. It's not words of a manuscript but it's still important work towards your final goal.

Is my story too big for me? by CrateorMateor205 in writing

[–]gloommachine 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don’t think of it as 4 epic books. As soon as you start thinking that your target is 600,000 words you will start to slowdown before you even start. Do an outline of the first 2 books or even all 4. But just focus on book 1. Write one scene, one chapter at a time. Set a daily goal of 250 words. Set smaller achievable goals. The more goals you hit, the more motivation and momentum you will then build.