Daily Archives: 2020-10-28

RIP Google Play Music, 2011 – 2020

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: I still haven't found an alternative I like as well, nothing else has the "local content first-class mixed with streaming library" behavior that GPM had. YT music, especially on mobile, is a shitshow. At least they fixed the commingled history issue, but the UI is unusably sparse, everything is slow, getting basic "play album" "play artist" gets interrupted by random youtube bootleg trash...
  • Goodbye, Google Music. Flower emojis are welcome and may be placed in the comment section below. [credit: Ron Amadeo ]

Google Play Music died last week. We've known this was coming for some time, and nothing ever happens across the entire Google user base all at once, but many bereaved Google customers are reporting a total loss of life for Google Music. For me the store is gone, speakers no longer work, the app is dead, and the website is dead. It's all gone.

The shutdown wave seems to be rolling across the Google Music userbase as you read this, and even if you still personally have access to some parts of the service, you probably won't have much time left to say your goodbyes. Google Music, born May 10, 2011, will leave us after nine wonderful years.

The service will now join Reader, Google+, and countless other products in the great Google graveyard in the sky. Covering the Google news beat in this day and age basically means running a full-time funeral parlor, and just as we did for the death of Google Inbox, we're here to peacefully guide Google Music into the afterlife with a proper send-off. Thank you for being here today as we celebrate the life of Google's trailblazing music service.

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On Abandoning the X Server

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Early on I was pretty excited about Wayland, but it's become clear that they "solved" the problems with X being largely supplanted by a morass of largely-incompatible extensions only semi-standardized by community agreement by designing a protocol that declares all kinds of necessary-but-difficult features "out of scope" and consigns them to ... a morass of largely-incompatible extensions that aren't even semi-standardized by community agreement, which are now full of non-portable bodges. Unless and until there is a strong agreement among major players (right now, specifically between Gnome, KDE, and the wlroots libraries) around a single protocol for screen capture (for capture, for color pickers, for screen sharing...), a single protocol for the desktop inter-op stuff that used to be covered by ICCM, a single protocol for remoting, a single protocol for input interception and injection, etc. Wayland is somewhere between "not ready" and "actively a problem".
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SparkFun À La Carte

Source: Hacker News

Article note: That's an interesting offering. It's basically board-integration-as-a-service for anything built from SparkFun parts (including whole assemblies), for about $1k. They also offer a basic board foundry and population from their stocked components for your own design files starting at about $150. I'm not sure how big the market between "I can just do it and send it to a small run board house like OSHPark or PCBWay" and "I don't know what these words mean" is, but it's the only offering I know of in that space.
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