The song's journey to mainstream awareness was unconventional:

The common search for the ".flac" extension reflects the cult demand for high-fidelity versions of the track, especially after it faced significant availability issues . Why "That One Song" Went Viral

Nettspend employs his signature slurry, Auto-Tuned flow, delivering "blissed-out" lyrics about drug use and youthful excess.

The track is built around a distinctive, slightly pitched-up sample of the song by the alternative metal band Deftones . Producer Justron combined this ethereal rock foundation with distorted 808s and the erratic, high-energy percussion characteristic of the underground "jerk" subgenre.

The track by Virginia-born rapper Nettspend stands as a defining moment in the modern "post-post-rage" and underground "jerk" scenes . First teased as a snippet in late 2023, the song became a viral phenomenon on TikTok and Twitter long before its official release on July 8, 2024 . The Sound: Deftones Meets "Jerk"

Set of PCBs designed and created with Flux

1. Nettspend - That One Song.flac Access

The song's journey to mainstream awareness was unconventional:

The common search for the ".flac" extension reflects the cult demand for high-fidelity versions of the track, especially after it faced significant availability issues . Why "That One Song" Went Viral

Nettspend employs his signature slurry, Auto-Tuned flow, delivering "blissed-out" lyrics about drug use and youthful excess.

The track is built around a distinctive, slightly pitched-up sample of the song by the alternative metal band Deftones . Producer Justron combined this ethereal rock foundation with distorted 808s and the erratic, high-energy percussion characteristic of the underground "jerk" subgenre.

The track by Virginia-born rapper Nettspend stands as a defining moment in the modern "post-post-rage" and underground "jerk" scenes . First teased as a snippet in late 2023, the song became a viral phenomenon on TikTok and Twitter long before its official release on July 8, 2024 . The Sound: Deftones Meets "Jerk"

Our vision

Taking the hard out of hardware

Unlike software, building hardware is still insanely difficult. If you’re working with atoms, the costs are high, the risks are significant, and the timelines are long.

We founded Flux to make atoms as malleable as bits.We want to take the hard out of hardware, to make it as easy for a teenager to build an iPhone as a website. Read more about Flux manifesto.
A pcb flower made up of pcb circuits, pcb traces and luminous led light.

If you can type,
you can build

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