![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
Looks nice! Someone's been a busy puppy!
In the mixer I can't seem to get bass/treble to work (on fast box
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Thanks!
Ahhh, ok.zigbert wrote:The treble/bass controller is only reachable if your soundcard supports it
I'm doing some work on puppyluvr's "puptv"... maybe I can work in something there.zigbert wrote:Where is your first window preset?
All you need now is a reddish gtk theme and your desktop will be complete. I'm working on a "Reign in Blood" theme!tasmod wrote:I've added a pic of my desktop with the themes I've made, all on at once.
I've had a couple of dozen soundcards, and I don't think any of them had tone controls... even the two nice ones that I use for recording as they are very clear and accurate. Although I guess serious audiophiles would say the sound would be worse if they had tone controlsYou seems to be one of many unlucky guys who bought a too cheap soundcard.
Disciple, I am interested to hear what practical diff there is between this, and just minimising the window. Lower resource use?disciple wrote:Remember how music originally kept playing when you closed the pmusic window? How much work would it be to add this feature back in as a command line option?
i would appreciate this too. i loved this 'feature' of pmusic.disciple wrote:Remember how music originally kept playing when you closed the pmusic window? How much work would it be to add this feature back in as a command line option?
It doesn't take up space on the taskbar. So you could put a button to launch Pmusic on the taskbar, and it would be almost like the xmms status icon, or using alltray... but with Pmusic.Disciple, I am interested to hear what practical diff there is between this, and just minimising the window. Lower resource use?
My guess is its checking the music database as it opens, which slows it down? If so, maybe it only checks say two levels, so putting your music lib in a sub-folder may fix it?disciple wrote:It doesn't take up space on the taskbar. So you could put a button to launch Pmusic on the taskbar, and it would be almost like the xmms status icon, or using alltray... but with Pmusic.Disciple, I am interested to hear what practical diff there is between this, and just minimising the window. Lower resource use?
The trouble is that Pmusic takes quite a while to open
Have you tried the new function 'menu > window > Navigator window'. This is meant as a replacement for this.disciple wrote:Remember how music originally kept playing when you closed the pmusic window? How much work would it be to add this feature back in as a command line option?
To be honest, I have never looked at this...... But if anyone have the knowledge, I'll listen.01micko wrote:Here's my idea... what about a button that shrinks Pmusic to the task bar? Yeah, yeah, it's been suggested, and I bet ziggy is racking his brain trying to figure it out.
The slow start has many aspects, but Pmusic does not check the database else you choose to 'Update index'. The startup-time could be improved, but is not ranked highest on my priority list.DaveS wrote:My guess is its checking the music database as it opens, which slows it down?
Truly, - but I don't like that point of view. When things gets slow, the coder (zigbert in this case) has focused on features without having speed in mind. I tend to allow myself a slower application startup to keep things responsive while using the app. I like the speed of the Pmusic indexer and search function. I have never seen any other program viewing my 20000 audio files as fast as Pmusic. This specific part of the code was written with speed in mind, and other features in the indexer was pushed aside. But again. - Looking at my own code, things could be improved. The way I implemented support of flexible windows/guis slows down startup dramatically. Reorganize things could speed up things, but all solutions seems to have dark side.disciple wrote:Gtkdialog is just slow.
I didn't count mine, but there are a hell of a lot of files! Yes, the indexing was very fast.zigbert wrote:I like the speed of the Pmusic indexer and search function. I have never seen any other program viewing my 20000 audio files as fast as Pmusic.