Presented by Sander Jansen
It is 2010 and in Arch Linux there are tons of music players and managers to choose from. So why should you use Goggles Music Manager? Why develop yet another music player for the Linux Desktop? And why are people still looking for the “perfect” player?
I’ll show how you can use Goggles Music Managers to play and organize your music collection quickly and easily. I’ll also show off some of the new and exciting features that are currently under development.
We will also take a look behind the scenes and discuss my motivation for developing another music player, its design and choice of components it depends on, as well as Maintaining a good balance between new features and keeping it light and fast. We will look at some of the challenges developing cross-desktop applications: the struggle to fit in, attracting active contributors, integrating with the various desktop environments, and the ever changing landscape of audio on the
Linux desktop (pulseaudio, phonon, gstreamer, xine).
Bio:
Born in the Netherlands and graduated from the Hogeschool van Amsterdam, Sander Jansen is a software engineer at ESI Group in Huntsville, Alabama. At ESI he develops engineering software for post-processing CFD analysis results. Initially he ran Mandrake Linux, but has been an Arch Linux user since 2003. He uses Arch both at home and as his primary development platform at work. Jansen has been contributing to open source projects since 2001,starting with small patches to the FOX-Toolkit and running the FOX Community wiki. In 2002 he published his first open source program “Goggles”, a popular frontend for ogle dvd player. For the last few years he has focused on developing and maintaining his own music manager: Goggles Music Manager. Sander has a dog named Einstein.