[Rhythmbox-devel] Why I'll Probably Always Use amaroK
- From: Andrei Thorp <garoth gmail com>
- To: rhythmbox-devel gnome org
- Subject: [Rhythmbox-devel] Why I'll Probably Always Use amaroK
- Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2006 19:11:29 -0500
Hello.
First off, this is not intended to offend any of the great people
working on Rhythmbox, this is simply why I have always used and will
probably always use amaroK instead of Rhythmbox.
1) (Most Important) amaroK is a very attractive program. They have good
digital artists and a photographer working for them, if you check out
the website, you'll see what I mean. Also, amaroK does cover images from
amazon.com, and it displays them often, making the program look quite
nice. Notice also, that it has pleasant and non-offensive pop-ups
telling you of what song is playing, with cool rounded off edges (which
I suppose aren't that important, because square edges could be cool
too). There are many pieces of amaroK which have an artistic touch to
them, right down to how the side tabs fade in and out when you hover
over them. Pretty much, there is a lot of nice stuff to look at in
amaroK, including visualizations that are nice and up front by default.
Face it, although flashy stuff may not be the most functional, it's
certainly important to a lot of users (like me), is being more and more
incorporated into the desktop, and is very important for music players
(considering the fact that most of the big ones are quite attractive:
Windows Media Player 10 is a feat of art (although it sucks for
usability, I think, and I don't like the feel), Apple's iTunes does a
lot of nice sliding and animation, and is very usable, although not very
compact, and Amarok has it's own style, as described above a bit.
Rythmbox, although very usable, isn't nice to look at. You may ask how
often I see a music player? Well, a lot, actually. I change songs often
and the pop-ups from amaroK with the album cover make an impression.
2) Although Rythmbox is easy to use and quite complete with features, it
does something very smart: it doesn't show them all when they won't be
needed... amaroK does, and that really shows how powerful it is. Maybe a
fault, maybe a bonus. Example: music devices. On amaroK there is always
a tab for it, on Rhythmbox, it shows up when needed. The interface is so
nice and clean that it looks like the program isn't done. I know this is
finicky, but that's my impression.
Aside from that, Rhythmbox is great. It's faster than anything and it
works really well. I think that with a bit of flashyness and without the
14 mile track bar for where in the song you are, it would be absolutely
great. Good work, I hope that it'll keep it's good stuff while picking
up the other good stuff of other players.
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