Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
People still used WMP? How behind the times is everybody? XMMS FTW :D
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Actually from the brief look at it when I installed Windows 7 they seemed to have made some sizable improvements over the old versions. Not enough for me to switch from foobar though.
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Quote:
Originally Posted by
iLOVENZB
People still used WMP? How behind the times is everybody? XMMS FTW :D
You still use XMMS? Bah! Get with the times man, install Banshee.
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Quote:
Originally Posted by
iLOVENZB
XMMS FTW :D
:yes: :yes: :yes: :yes:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Speedo
You still use XMMS? Bah! Get with the times man, install Banshee.
can your precious banshee run with less than %1 cpu? can you change its song without touching the mouse? :P
seriously dude, novell is the next Microsoft
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Expeto
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Speedo
You still use XMMS? Bah! Get with the times man, install Banshee.
can your precious banshee run with less than %1 cpu? can you change its song without touching the mouse? :P
seriously dude, novell is the next Microsoft
Exactly, However claiming Novell is the next Windows worries me a bit. Once you start going mainstream and try catering for every tom, dick and harry's needs do you start to lose your top position. I believe this is what Ubuntu, although a great distro, is currently doing.
Ubuntu's side projects aren't currently trying to grab attention of the mainstream mainly because not everybody has a shit pc build or would even think of getting a Debian based server.
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
How do you change the song without using the mouse? Do you mean using only the keyboard? If so, I'm pretty sure any decent program has that capability. If not, do you mean using a remote control? If so, then I also believe that just about any decent software player can do the same. So I don't see the big deal. Otherwise, I'm not sure what else there is besides mind control. Also, unless I'm missing something, most audio playing software doesn't really use much for cpu resources. Even on an old computer, an audio player will usually sit between 00-01 being used, even if you're playing high bitrate FLAC files or 24-bit audio. But it's possible there's something I'm missing.
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Quote:
Originally Posted by
iLOVENZB
Exactly, However claiming Novell is the next Windows worries me a bit. Once you start going mainstream and try catering for every tom, dick and harry's needs do you start to lose your top position. I believe this is what Ubuntu, although a great distro, is currently doing.
Ubuntu's side projects aren't currently trying to grab attention of the mainstream mainly because not everybody has a shit pc build or would even think of getting a Debian based server.
To be honest I don't think ubuntu is a great distro, It is becoming a garbage salad. Its a distro where smart linux users go to die.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jkl49
How do you change the song without using the mouse? Do you mean using only the keyboard? If so, I'm pretty sure any decent program has that capability. If not, do you mean using a remote control? If so, then I also believe that just about any decent software player can do the same. So I don't see the big deal. Otherwise, I'm not sure what else there is besides mind control. Also, unless I'm missing something, most audio playing software doesn't really use much for cpu resources. Even on an old computer, an audio player will usually sit between 00-01 being used, even if you're playing high bitrate FLAC files or 24-bit audio. But it's possible there's something I'm missing.
...
What I mean was plain cli controls, like typing "xmms2 next" to command line for the next song, such controls have mindblowing potential.
Re: To all you mp3 p2p groups..
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Expeto
To be honest I don't think ubuntu is a great distro, It is becoming a garbage salad. Its a distro where smart linux users go to die.
It's where users go to dip their toes into a distro ;). Although Mandriva and OpenSUSE seem more popular with newcommers now-days. On the campus they're using Mac OSX (Snow Leopard) so I haven't really touched a Linux distro in a few years.
I dived into about 6 distros at one time when I ventured into Linux. Have to say Ubuntu was a great starting point; their forum was full of noob questions and answered all my issues - haven't touched it since Dapper Drake :D.