Music is good
There’s been a pretty annoying bug on my laptop which appeared when I
upgraded to Ubuntu 7.04. It causes my optical drive (/dev/hda) to spaz
out every few hours, meaning that if I want to use it I need to send a
command to reset the drive (sudo hdparm -w /dev/hda), and if I want to
use it at any kind of decent speed I need to turn DMA back on since the
reset command turns it off (hdparm -d 1 /dev/hda). That’s not too much
of an issue since I’ve used optical discs less and less over the years
(I’ve ripped pretty much all of my tiny DVD collection onto my external
hard drive, I get all of my software online, I transfer files via email
attachments and USB sticks, etc.). The big issue, though, is that when
it ‘appears confused’ (that’s the actual phrase in the kernel output :P
) the system thinks that there is an audio CD inside, and Rhythmbox
crashes trying to access it. This means I have to kill Rhythmbox, reset
the drive then load Rhythmbox again, only for it to crash again a few
hours later (it seems to be getting more frequent :( ).
The
solution, of course, is Amarok. However Amarok is being a silly sausage
and telling me that songs aren’t in my collection no matter how many
times I rebuild it. I might try telling it to use MySQL instead of
SQLite now that I have a MySQL server running doing nothing. Meh, it
likes to crash too. Amarok 2 I suppose is meant to be promising, but I’m
really not a fan of the UI. Yes it is nice to “Rediscover my music”, but
the word used there is MUSIC. I don’t give a crap about albums, they’re
a device invented by record labels to charge people more for the songs
they want licenses to hear and justifying it by bundling a load of
filler. I may be interested in lyrics, but I either know them already or
I’m not too bothered all of the time. The artist info might be nice to
read through, but once again I don’t want it all of the time. What I do
want to access is my music collection, but that is relegated to a sub
section of the left panel, with the current playlist as the right
panel.
However, the collection is grouped as a tree, so
direct access to every track means expanding the whole tree, which
leaves beurocratic rows (ie. the artist and album names, which exist
only to make the tree view work), whilst adding the whole collection to
the playlist, aside from crashing Amarok (which is just a bug), adds a
huge load of cruft I don’t care about to make it look all
blingified.
Essentially, everything that was right about
Amarok’s 1.x series can be embodied in tunnel vision: having a massive
panel to go through the whole collection easily, with search, queueing
(because I don’t like the restrictions of regular playlists), etc. as
the main focus, along with nice additions sprinkled around the outside
such as track info, last.fm integration, lyrics, Wikipedia, etc. which
are available when the user wants. Now the paradigm has shifted to
peripheral vision, ie. the nice extra things are shoved right in the
middle, forcing the user to traverse through the complex and varied
subdivisions of the outside area used to fit the bulk of the features
into the smallest available space just to use the music playing
funcitonality.
Think of it this way,
here is an Amarok
1.x style interface, very to the point and easy to get at the main
feature, whilst this is
the equivalent of Amarok 2.x’s interface, ie. how the hell do I get past
this cruft and to the actual thing?
Anyway, didn’t mean to go
off on a rant there but I did anyway.
Back to the point, I’ve
currently got Exaile open (although I’m going to have to restart it
since it has crashed :P ) and I’ve been listening to some stuff I’ve had
for years. It is good. Power Metal can cheer any situation up
(
Just how deep do you believe?
Will you bite the hand
that feeds?
Will you chew until it bleeds?
Can you get up off
your knees?
Are you brave enough to see?
Do you want to change
it?