Perspectives On KDE Multimedia 12
sombragris points out this interview on OfB, excerpting "Open for Business Associate Editor Eduardo Sánchez sits down with Scott Wheeler, creator and lead developer of JuK, and a member of the KDE Multimedia Team, to find out where the KDE multimedia department is headed in general, and concerning a replacement for aRts, more specifically."
A change (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A change (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A change (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed, it has improved a lots. I still find myself reaching for the kickarts applet far too often though -- the sound system should really work completely transparently. I actually avoid non-KDE apps simply because they often use a different method for sound control. It would be great if GStreamer because the sole standard for Linux on the desktop, simply because a standard is really needed (much like how we almost all use X).
Regarding latency, it is adjustable for aRts, however, the lower the latency, th
Re:A change (Score:1)
In general (Score:4, Insightful)
And kdemultimedia has always been the weakest point in the KDE lineup, partly as a result of no one to enforce policy in it. aRts and noatun became its centerpieces because each had an enthusiastic developer pushing it. JuK, on the other hand, is a very nice piece of work (next to iTunes, my favorite music player) and hopefully Scott Wheeler's influence in the vacuum that seems to have appeared will improve things.
Re:In general (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:In general (Score:1)
Re:In general (Score:2)
Re:In general (Score:2)
And GNOME too (Score:4, Interesting)
Can I be the first one to say that "this will be the year of audio on Linux Desktop?"
Arts is truly remarkable system (Score:3, Interesting)
Arts is a truly remarkable system, at least scalability-wise, as here it is able to produce skips and strange decoding errors no matter how modern x86 runs it!
On my old Pentium-II 333MHz 384MB a 5-10% CPU use while playing mp3's was almost a great achievement, but boy, was I surprised when I got a new system a year ago (Athlon XP 1800+, KT400 based), arts was still able to use those 5-10% CPU and producing all the same kind of errors and skips..
I love arts.
To be serious for a moment.. I'm not sure whether a Microsoft like approach to handling multimedia is right. It sounds good on paper, but would it be possible to accomplish, without overcomplicating things (again)?
Re:Arts is truly remarkable system (Score:1)
Just re-confirming what you say: I have an AMD Athlon 64 at 2200 mhz, and arts audio is just as delayed and garbled as on a 500mhz P3.
However, I'm not overly impressed with their scalability, as the competing Gnome esound has achieved similar levels of performance.