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Chrome Music

Chrome is Getting the Ability To Play FLAC (theverge.com) 80

Audiophiles are getting a new way to listen to one of the top formats for lossless music. From a report: Google has begun adding FLAC support to Chrome, and it should be rolling out to the masses very soon. FLAC support is already live in Chrome's beta build and it's live in the current version of Chrome OS, too. If you have local FLAC files or come across one on the web, the added support allows Chrome to open it up in a completely bare-bones music player that takes over the entire tab. It's not exactly elegant, but it works. And it means that Mac users with Chrome installed will have an easy way to play back FLAC files should they come across one. While there are plenty of apps that can handle FLAC -- VLC being a popular one -- no native macOS app is capable of it. Windows 10, on the other hand, includes native support.
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Chrome is Getting the Ability To Play FLAC

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  • I want to make sure I can do *everything* in my web browser so that I can be tracked in everything I do. More of this please...

    • This is good news if you have a Chromebook. Media support isn't very good on those and the VLC player is kind of crappy.
  • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Friday January 13, 2017 @11:20AM (#53661141)

    You mean, except for the one that was listed off immediately prior to that assertion? Though VLC is cross-platform, the Mac version is native to macOS.

    I think what they meant to say was that no first-party apps support FLAC, but even that's not strictly true, since you can use Fluke [macupdate.com] or other utilities to enable support for FLAC in iTunes, QuickTime, and other first-party apps. Or maybe they meant that no Mac-exclusive apps support FLAC, but that's not true either, since there are plenty of Mac-only apps that can operate on FLAC files (e.g. Rogue Amoeba's Fission [rogueamoeba.com]).

    FLAC support isn't baked in, to be sure, but there have been simple ways to use FLAC files on Macs for the vast majority of the format's lifespan. I'm even planning to go through and re-rip my entire collection to FLAC in the next few months.

    • The Mac program Swinsian also supports FLAC
    • by Anonymous Coward

      but even that's not strictly true, since you can use Fluke [macupdate.com] or other utilities to enable support for FLAC in iTunes, QuickTime, and other first-party apps.

      That's not true anymore as the move from the Quicktime to AVFoundation frameworks shut out 3rd party format converters like Perian [perian.org] and Fluke. Note that the link you used is from 2013 and the Fluke no longer works on newer versions of OSX.

      In my case, I converted my FLAC collection to the native Apple Lossless format and I can convert back if I wish in the future.

    • I use cmus for FLAC, but man would I sure love to see foobar on mac.

  • Firefox will do it too!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Enjoy your stay.

  • Chrome can't even get repeating MIDI/MP3/OGG to work properly. Now we're just getting more bloat added without Google fixing prior problems.

    Good thing I uninstalled Chrome long ago and haven't looked back.

    • Repeating MIDI?

      That's officially the dumbest reason to leave a browser, ever.

      • by fph il quozientatore ( 971015 ) on Friday January 13, 2017 @01:57PM (#53662365)
        Dude, how can I make my Geocities home page without my favorite repeating MIDI background music? </blink> </marquee>
        • by Khyber ( 864651 )

          You people think MIDI is outdated yet it's still the base controller for most music you're hearing today. How cute. Have you even heard the samples modern MIDI instruments have?

          • I think it's outdated to use it on a web page -- that's a different thing. I'm sure it works great in its own field. (Do browsers have high-quality MIDI samples anyway?)
            • by Khyber ( 864651 )

              Up until Windows Vista, MIDI was handled by the hardware or the Microsoft GS Wavetable Synth or whatever flavor of softsynth you had (like Timidity,) the browser just used whatever you had selected as your MIDI device. That option has been removed, now, so in Windows, you're stuck with whatever shitty GS they have unless you use another media player that can allow soft-loading of soundfonts (yay, AIMP2!)

              Example of what MIDI can really do - https://soundcloud.com/technic... [soundcloud.com]

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        I have a web-plugin soundfont bank for my in-development game that makes MIDI sound utterly realistic. As long as you aren't looking for lyrics, there's no point in using OGG/FLAC/MP3, PERIOD, and it cuts way down on game size.

  • All 12 of them!

  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Friday January 13, 2017 @12:34PM (#53661659)

    ... get a lot of that, already?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Not like anyone is using MNG.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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