Summary
Will FLB Music become our main music player in LinuxLinks Towers? Not by a long chalk.
The absence of gapless playback removes any consideration from our perspective. And it’s missing lots of functionality that we find useful even if we don’t use it that much.
With a bit of maturity, FLB Music may be worth investigating further. There’s definitely potential here.
Website: flb.netlify.app
Support: GitHub Code Repository
Developer: Patrick Waweru
License: GNU General Public License v3.0
FLB Music is written in TypeScript and uses Vue.js, a model–view–viewmodel front end JavaScript framework for building user interfaces and single-page applications. Learn TypeScript with our recommended free books and free tutorials.
Pages in this article:
Page 1 – Introduction / Installation
Page 2 – In Operation
Page 3 – Memory Usage
Page 4 – Summary
It’s refreshing to see coverage of open source software that’s garbage. Too often open source software is portrayed as the bees knees when the majority is turgid. Someone will remind me that great oaks from little acorns grow. That’s possible too.
What’s a good collective noun to describe turkey open source software?
Great oaks from little acorns grow
I honestly couldn’t agree more, i think it is a beautiful player it really does kinda suck functionality wise, I have decent gaming pc and it suffers from severe slowdowns when this app runs and the app itself crashes sometimes. It is a good concept, because I do love the way it looks visually but It needs a lot of work under the hood to be my main player. I scrobble all my music and the lack of that option eliminates this player for me.
I really want to defend FLB Music. But in this instance it would be defending the indefensible.
That said the developer puts in a lot of work to try to put together his player. That should be applauded. With time the many bugs may be ironed out, essential functionality added, and it’ll be a gem of a player.
I’m not concerned about gapless playback and never use scrobbling. Within my circle of friends, they fall into the ‘nice to have’ camp, but I understand why some people will not move away from their current music player if the new contender doesn’t have them. I’m just getting into classical music.
That’s a hefty memory footprint, at least it’s less than most web browsers.