"A few more songs and this project will be done." I was planning to do more than ten songs, maybe fifteen, even twenty songs. I was on the files for Discord and looked for the biggest bytes it offered. I couldn't exactly remember which file it was or how big it was, but considering Discordian Update's length, it was most likely big. Cool, another song down. Let's do another. This is where I went to (I believe) Google Chrome's files to get even bigger ones. I underestimated how big one thing can be. As shown on Bandcamp, the song Acro-Datacab is split into two parts, but not by intention. Originally the song, as a whole, lasted up to forty-one minutes and seventeen seconds, and it also took a while both importing the data and exporting it as a WAV file. Because of this massive duration, I wanted to see if listeners could be able to listen to the entire track in one sitting, somewhat dedicating themselves to finish that one song (besides, if people can listen through Merzbient, which the entire album lasts ten hours with each track about an hour long, then maybe people can be able to sit through this one song). But upon uploading the track in Bandcamp, it wouldn't allow it. It was most likely its large duration that it wouldn't upload, but at the time, my Internet was at a low reception, making uploading, browsing, and whatnot slower. Anyways, it wouldn't upload, no matter how many times I wanted it to, so I went to Audacity to split it. Part one and two of Acro-Datacab was complete. After that, nighttime was approaching, and I scouted over for more files. I eventually when to the Internet Explorer files and gotten a more... "melodic" sound from it (baring the wall of noise that was in the data). It only lasted about two minutes and fifty-five seconds, so I went and imported a random, but related, file that, luckily enough, lasted five seconds. Help Explorer done. Album complete and published. Documentary written.
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