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Soundtools wallcat12/18/2023 ![]() ![]() Your product will be repaired and returned to you in a specified amount of time. WHAT'S COVERED: Salama Extended Warranty Plan provides coverage for cost of repair for covered inherent mechanical and electrical breakdown.Extended warranty plan is applicable on New devices or appliances and Plan is valid only if purchased with a valid product from Amazon in the same cart or if purchased within 30 days post product purchase. VALIDITY: Salama Care Extended Warranty Plan begins the day after your manufacturer warranty end date and will be valid for a subsequent period of Twelve (12) or Twenty-Four (24) months or Thirty-Six (36) months (as per plan opted by the customer).After ordering, for plan related details, check 'Buyer/Seller messages' under Message Center at "amazon.ae/msg" or check your Amazon registered email ID.You can raise a claim/enquire about refunds/enquire about tax invoice by contacting our helpline +971 and share your order ID and we will take care of the rest. DELIVERY & CLAIM: Plan will be E-mail Fulfilled, No Physical Kit will be sent.When you focus on being valuable instead of owning valuable stuff, surprisingly you get asked to operate the more valuable stuff way more often. Your experience as a technician and value as a creative or professional voice should be why your phone rings. You don’t have to feel much about doing either. Gear can be rented or bought when needed and sold to make ends meet when it’s not. ![]() The best tip I’ve received from another Sound Human? Don’t mistake the gear you own for your value as an audio professional. What's the best tip you've received or best tip you would give another Sound Human? Rearranging the workspace and desks way too often to make it feel more like a gig has been a bit of a hobby, helpful too if you’re not used to a desk job. The DcSoundOp videos each week are as close to a hobby as it gets this year. What kind of hobbies have kept you busy during? It’s something I’d like to keep growing and hopefully work on bigger projects in the future. Producing and editing videos for other people in the industry has been a nice experience too. Everyone was forced to take their whole world online with little notice, helping with that effort has kept me somewhat busy thankfully. Instead of traveling to gigs and events, I’ve been fortunate to do a little bit of consulting with some of the same clients. It’s tough to hear so many people going through the same thing. They have been doing anything they can to keep a roof over their family's head, but with a real concern they’ll be left out of the industry when work comes back, if they’re not available to jump at it. I heard from a lot of people who had very few options, resources, or opportunities to get by on. The variety of things industry friends and crew have done to get by and keep businesses afloat in any way possible has been inspiring. It’s hard to know how everyone is really doing, even talking to so many people. What kind of companies or people in the industry do you feel are struggling the most right now? You get the chance to interview and talk to a lot of the different people in the industry before and during the pandemic. anymore, we moved away a year ago for a number of reasons, all of which were going great for the six months leading up to the pandemic. It was my email for years before YouTube and just made sense at the time to keep using it. for the past twenty years, and trying to find a simple name to use online. The DcSoundOp name came from working in Washington, D.C. There wasn’t anyone talking about the everyday work, the smaller gigs, or how to start from zero and get a foot in the door. Outside of the studio content, what you would find typically only focused on the top of the industry and the biggest acts. Musicians, photographers, and other creative professionals were finding each other on YouTube, but pro audio content was hard to find. After watching all of Dave Rat’s videos a few times, it always left me looking for more. When DcSoundOp was started five years ago, there was not a ton of pro audio content out there in video format. ![]() There was a magazine back then for anything you could think of and though most were not strictly educational, you’d see details in photos and get to hear from people behind the scenes. Growing up in the 90’s, magazines were always a huge resource for learning. Click here to check out his channel What inspired you to start your YouTube channel? ![]() Meet Steve Milner, an audio professional and creator of the popular DCSoundOp YouTube channel that focuses on pro audio content and is a great resource for when you’re looking for pro-audio videos, reviews and more! We got a chance to interview him and learn what inspired him to start his channel and how the pandemic has impacted him as well as others in the industry. Audio Professional and Creator of DCSoundOp ![]()
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