Actually, I was responding to you, not the OP. I specifically responded to the OP. It wa your disagreement that I found selective and unreasonable. Everything you said after that is just a boilerplate response that can go towards any and every streaming service. Which was my point, you found issue with Tidal because of who said it, and any sustained anger at a bad press conference seems a bit childish to me. It’s like how X-Box One had a bad launch because of some of the features but people have moved on and are not just looking at the service. The sustained anger of Tidal just wreaks of some sort of irrational dislike that would not have occurred if you did not know who the backers were. Furthermore, they are not Apple with its billions, if they had not stood up on this stage, this thing would have flopped like Pono did. The fact that months later, most of the complaints about Tidal seem to be primarily about that initial press conference and the expectations placed upon it are greater than those placed on any other streaming service (including Spotify) seems to justify the shock that Jay Z, Jack White, and deadmau5 had at the media portrayal. As it stands Tidal has taken 6 different acts that no one knew of and is putting them on the main stage at the giant Made in America festival. It places the content of unknown or unsigned artists right next to major artists in its featured tab, etc. No other streaming service is doing more to highlight independent artists. As someone who has not settled on one particular streaming service, I see flaws in all of them and only Tidal’s seem to get talked about and that is because they have celebrity backers and it will get a lot of hits. The same people who bought overpriced Beats headphones that were low quality because celebs said they were cool now are mad at celebs being the face of another service. It’s laughable and selective outrage. Your opinion is unreasonable in that Apple just came out with celebs on stage or indirectly (T. Swift) and parroted a lot of the same messages and received none of the backlash. Literally, the entire streaming community (except Spotify) seems to be moving towards doing what Tidal does. In other words, if you hate Tidal, then you pretty much must hate streaming music services in general because it’s model is exactly what everyone sees as the future. And if you hate streaming music services in general then there’s no point in complaining about what Tidal specifically is doing to upset you. FYI, it looks entirely disingenuous to claim that you dislike the UI of a service that you claimed to not have given the time of day.