Decibel has been there for a few years and in incubator for close a year (?). This sounds like a drama out of nothing. One video I watch and this blog missed that it will not replace Gnome Music either which will still be there (AFAIK).
Its written in Typescript, is it an Electron app?
No, it’s not. You can write apps for Gnome in a bunch of different programming languages.
They just hate for the sake of hating. This article is junk.
The blogger fails to notice the difference between a music player/manager and an audio player.
The audio player plays audio files, that’s it while the music player manages music/allows playlist and whatnot.
And I thought the controversy was that Decible was written in JavaScript/GJS and not that the blogger is an idiot with a blog.
Now, picture a new Linux user deciding to try GNOME for the first time or choosing a distribution that offers a vanilla GNOME experience. One of the first things they’ll likely do is test the multimedia capabilities. They double-click on an audio file, and… well, that’s what I’d call a disappointing introduction to Linux
Actually its not disappointing at all, the audio plays just like the user would expect.
They want to hate know for the sake of it
What’s wrong with that? If you think it’s bloat, GNOME has tons of that and this is just a minor one. I wouldn’t be surprised if Decibels integrated into Nautilus to play audio files directly in the file manager. Probably more beneficial for mobile than desktop though.
play audio files directly in the file manager
Isn’t that what gnome-sushi is for?
I agree with you, I just wanted to share this for the sake of completion.
I guess the author of the article has reacted too much. The audio player they mentioned is a music player. At this point a simple audio player suits GNOME more after all of those simplifications they made for core applications.
The issue is not that it’s bloat but that it makes a bad first impression, especially on new users. This is very much “batteries-not-included” software.
In the old days, before it bitrotted, Rhythmbox could do a lot. You could play an entire album or playlist, search, sort, sync your iPod, you could play and rip CDs – and it was much quicker than iTunes nonetheless. Alternatively, you could use Totem for music and video and even that could do playlists. Modern Totem has some playlist functionality, but that functionality is so basic, it only works by opening multiple files at once from the file manager. Now Decibels basically does the same thing as modern Totem, except with a waveform background but not better in any other way.
Gnome Music still exists. This isn’t a music player, it’s an audio player.
While I wouldn’t oppose the idea of a pre-installed music player, I believe Rhythmbox was never a core application. I hope they won’t make a music player a core app because you cannot uninstall them because of dependencies. Also the first impression is the distro’s concern not GNOME’s. I support modularism instead of making softwares bundle in a bundle. For example, I should be able to use whatever file manager without worrying about the whole DE bloat. For GNOME, they are in too deep for dependencies, as for KDE.
I appreciate GNOME’s work for simplicity, but I don’t appreciate their dependency hell.
Rhythmbox was never a core application
Rhythmbox was originally a GNOME 2 app that never fully made it into the GNOME 3 era. Otoh, “core apps” is a concept introduced some time after GNOME 3.0. That timeline can’t match up.
The original GNOME 3/4 core music player was/is GNOME Music. Except GNOME Music was so reduced as to be barely useful, especially at the beginning. Creating an opening for e.g. Lollypop.
Also the first impression is the distro’s concern not GNOME’s.
Before core apps were introduced thereight be distros that would randomly ship GNOME with VLC, FileZilla, and xterm. I.e. apps that don’t integrate well with GNOME and are not regularly used by average users.
The idea behind core apps was trying to influence app selection on such distros. To make sure that all distros would ship with a default selection of useful, well-integrated apps. Iow, first impression is a major reason why core apps are even a thing.
For example, I should be able to use whatever file manager without worrying about the whole DE bloat
I don’t think I worried about “DE bloat” any time in the past ten years. Might be different if I was using Raspi desktop. :)