0 Followers
0 Following
1 Posts

SVG cursors: everything that you need to know about them

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/2098933

SVG cursors: everything that you need to know about them - KDE Social

Okteta got “Best Application” 2024 Akademy Award

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1998728

Okteta got “Best Application” 2024 Akademy Award - KDE Social

KStars 3.7.2 Released - KDE Social

Amarok 3.1 "Tricks of the Light" released!

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1720279

Amarok 3.1 "Tricks of the Light" released! - KDE Social

Kate and OrgMode - KDE Social

Release of KDE Stopmotion 0.8.7

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1426390

Release of KDE Stopmotion 0.8.7 - KDE Social

Interacting with mpv - Haruna

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1314480

Interacting with mpv - Haruna - KDE Social

Breeze Icon Updates for April 2024 – with a Little Heart for You!

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1144878

Breeze Icon Updates for April 2024 – with a Little Heart for You! - KDE Social

Amarok 3.0 beta (2.9.82) out now!

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1114685

Amarok 3.0 beta (2.9.82) out now! - KDE Social

Amarok might be coming back in 2024

https://lemmy.kde.social/post/1050921

Amarok might be coming back in 2024 - KDE Social

Amarok was KDE’s flagship music player during the KDE3 and Plasma 4 days. For Plasma 5, a new music player called Elisa was created with Kirigami which is the current KDE flagship music player. The last full release of Amarok was 2.9.0 in 2018, still targeting Qt4. A Plasma 5 port was started with the intention of being release as Amarok 3.0, but despite a usable alpha 2.9.71 release in 2021, the full 3.0 release was never completed. Outside of the occasional odd pull request, the project was essentially dead and was listed as unmaintained by apps.kde.org [https://apps.kde.org/amarok/]. Two weeks ago, occasional contributor Tuomas Nurmi [https://invent.kde.org/nurmi], author of over a third of these pull requests, made a push to become an Amarok maintainer, starting this thread in the mailing list: https://mail.kde.org/pipermail/amarok-devel/2024-March/014748.html [https://mail.kde.org/pipermail/amarok-devel/2024-March/014748.html] In the thread, Tuomas expresses his desire to revive Amarok. He believes a second alpha for 3.0 can be released in mid-April and a full Plasma 6 port could be completed within 2024 after the release of 3.0. Tuomas has since created a fair amount of merges and fixes in preparation for 3.0 and has shown no sign of stopping. This is very exciting news. For many, Elisa isn’t a satisfying replacement for Amarok. It simply doesn’t come close to matching Amarok’s power and features. It also has the drawback of being a convergent application, meaning compromises have to be made to make the interface work well on smartphones. It’s also victim to the many drawbacks of Kirigami. Theming is worse since Plasma has to convert QtWidget themes to QtQuick themes, which works great for Breeze and meh for everything else. There is no good equivalent for KStandardAction/QAction, KHamburgerMenu, KStandardShortcut or even QDockWidget. Any Kirigami app that wants customizable toolbars and shortcuts need to go out of their way to implement them, while QtWidgets apps just get them for free. You also don’t have a good QDockWidget equivalent that I know of. Most Kirigami apps don’t both with this at all and lose a lot of customizability in the process. Apps that do bother to reimplement some of these features (Haruna is the only one I know of) still don’t have toolbar customization to nearly the same extent QtWidgets apps do. Elisa is not Haruna, tho. There is no shortcut customization, there is no toolbar to customize and that hamburger menu can’t be turned into a menubar. For years, the solution was Strawberry, a fork of Amarok still under active development. Thing is, Strawberry is a fork of Clementine, itself a fork of Amarok 1.4. That’s old. That’s 2008 Amarok, not 2018 Amarok. Clementine had it first release in 2010, when Amarok was still going strong. It was for good reason, Amarok 2.0 introduced a very divisive redesign of the interface, which prompted a fork. But this means 2.0+ Amarok and Strawberry are actually very different beasts. For those who were using Amarok 2.9, switching to Strawberry meant switching to a new music player, making it far from an ideal successor. So I’m very much excited for the return of Amarok, the best music player.