

You searched before and read this being answered earlierįrom a maintainer's point of view - this is super annoying. You attached that with a PR for said framework orĢ. It's super annoying when you are trying to create a desktop app and you get issues (multiple of them) essentially going "Why are you using Electron? it eats up my RAM, please use X framework and you should be fine"ġ. While I get why people are annoyed by that message, I get and understand it. Half the features will be gone, and we'll have to start all over again in a worse position than before, because our hardware will be less open than it is now. The day Spotify decides to become more profitable, it will be over. What do I do then? I decided to go the Spotify way, while keeping a small "memories" library which contains the more obscure songs, plus the ones I want to keep with me forever. There's no easy way to access your library in other devices, there's no easy way to integrate a personal library with a cloud service, and there's no easy way to share your experiences with friends in the same way you can do it with Spotify. You ensure no songs will disappear from your library without notice, which is good. It's almost like the company is deleting a memory from your brain, hoping you won't notice its absence.Īnother option is to keep living in the 00s and maintain a home music library. A company that pulls a song from their catalog without notifying the user is borderline evil. Also, disappearing songs are a huge problem. 15 years without progress on the music social media front. Keep in mind Last.fm is more than 15 years old.

The app's slick, the multiple device support is awesome, and the social features, while nowhere near Audioscrobbler/Last.fm, are enough. So, which options do we have now? Users can surrender power and gain convenience by going with, say, Spotify.
Popcorn time music full#
Meanwhile, cloud music services are current trend, and it's not crazy to think they will follow the Nextflix-HBO-Disney steps and start creating walled gardens full of exclusive content.
Popcorn time music Bluetooth#
I'm scared Bluetooth audio will be the next to be forgotten. Google is already mounting an Embrace-Extend-Extinguish attack on it via the Chromecast protocol. It's too open of a standard for the current times. Sharing a song with a friend could be easily done by sending the whole song (duplicates were not an issue since well-formed MP3s usually included Musicbrainz UUIDs that the media players compared), or by simply linking to Youtube or Grooveshark.ĭLNA is slowly going the way of RSS.

Ten years ago evey respectable device had DLNA support, an agnostic way to browse and play all kinds of media content available on the local network.
