Feedback: FC8 Crashes, UI problems, etc.
Gleb Litvjak
blaster999 at gmail.com
Thu Apr 24 08:48:26 UTC 2008
Hello ziklag!
I'm not a developer, but here's what I think from a user's POV:
> 1. Amarok crashes frequently. I cannot load a playlist
> and walk away and expect it to run.
That is odd, cause on my box, Amarok never crashed for over a year. This may
be a packaging issue, a broken install, damaged files or something else. Does
it crash randomly or there are certain conditions that will make it 100%
crash?
> 3. I like to listen to sermons. Being spoken material,
> many of them are recorded at low bitrates. The Xine
> engine is simply not able to play these at any level
> of acceptability (mpg123 and SoundPlay (BeOS) work
> just fine). (But mpg123 is a commandline app.)
What exactly does it lack? Is the output quality substandard?
> 5. SoundPlay allows:
> a. multiple concurrent playlists
Amarok is not a playlist-oriented player. Instead, the main concept is the
collection (and things derived from it - smart playlists etc).
> b. playing many tracks concurrently
Hmmm... Playing 2 or more songs simulaneously? I wonder how many people would
really need this feature...
> c. playing music forwards or backwards(secret
> messages!) from -400% to + 400% pitch/speed.
The same here - I doubt that even 1% of Amarok users will appreciate this
feature.
> d. drag-n-drop interface (alas, that's due
> to Linux/KDE.)
You'll be surprised, but Amarok supports DnD.
> OK. I realize that BeOS was designed THE RIGHT WAY (TM)
> from the ground up (64bit FS, Attributes, Near Real-Time
> response, seemless audio/video support with integral
> plug-in architecture.) Linux is forced to respond with
> myriads of half-finished/half bugged-checked libraries.
> (DLL H*LL/RPM madness ensues when one tries to update an FC
> system (first you must delete all existing A/V libraries to
> update because missing dependancies prevent updates of certain
> RPMS.)
This is a Fedora problem - there are many other distributions, so you can
check them out.
> O.K. How can you fix this?
>
> 1. Use the MPG123 or (MPG321) engine instead. That is
> use a plug-in architecture for MP3, OGG, WMA support
> instead of relying on the inadequate buggy Xine engine.
I seriously doubt that - as Amarok 1.4* series are now considered "legacy",
and Amarok 2 already uses Phonon instead of Xine, the devs would not spend
precious time and effort changing the audio engine (which will certainly
require quite a lot of work and introduce new bugs).
> 3. Encourage Linux "powers that be" to take a serious
> look at BeOS and what it has to offer. Ask yourselves
> why someone would prefer to use an 8 year old OS on
> a Pentium III instead of FC8 on an Athlon 64Bit system.
Hmmm... Power of habitude?
> 4. Get RedHat to get a clue to the fact that MP3 is the
> de facto standard and to allow easy access to PLAYBACK
> capabilities. There's nothing illegal about me playing
> my purchased MP3, my BeOS (BladeEnc) ripped music, etc.
> on my Linux box.
That is a redhat problem, which other distros lack. On a kubuntu box all you
have to do is install libxine1-extracodecs and tunepimp5-mp3 (for MusicBrainz
lookup) - and viola! MP3 works.
Best regards,
Gleb
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