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Music OS X Software Apple

Apple Is Rebuilding Apple Music As a Full Native App (9to5mac.com) 38

Apple is rebuilding Apple Music as a full native app with the first beta of macOS Monterey 12.2. 9to5Mac reports: Back in 2019, when Apple introduced macOS Catalina, the well-known iTunes was replaced by the Music app to better reflect the company's strategy on iOS and tvOS. However, although under a new name, the Music app on macOS retained the iTunes backend, which was basically a bunch of web content loaded into an app. While this works for most users, having web content within apps makes the experience less fluid. Luckily Apple is finally changing this with macOS Monterey 12.2 beta, which includes some big changes to the Music app backend.

As first noted by Luming Yin on Twitter, Apple Music in macOS 12.2 beta now uses AppKit -- which is macOS' native interface framework. 9to5Mac was able to confirm based on macOS code that the Music app is now using JET, which is a technology created by Apple to turn web content into native apps. Some parts of the Music app were already native, such as the music library. But now Mac users will notice that searching for new songs in Apple Music is much faster as the results pages are displayed with a native interface instead of as a webpage. Scrolling between elements has also become smoother with the beta app, and trackpad gestures are now more responsive.

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Apple Is Rebuilding Apple Music As a Full Native App

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  • I hope they also use the same code base for the iOS and iPadOS versions so they can bring more features over from the desktop app, like editing/creating smart playlists and uploading our own music to the iCloud Music Library!
  • by fuzzyf ( 1129635 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @07:09AM (#62089827)
    I'm currently using Spotify and white it works pretty smooth on all platforms I use, it is really annoying when tracks or albums disappear.

    Streaming is nice, but I kinda like owning my music.

    I've looked into using Apple Music because of the feature to upload my music collection and stream that together with the available Apple Music catalog. That is really excellent for my use case, where I can listen to pretty much anything but still slowly grow my own collection. My only gripe with Apple Music is that it is useless on Windows, and I'm forced to use Windows for work. Spotify seems to be accepted, but I can't really start to install something like iTunes on a work computer. Not even going into the UX of iTunes when just playing music.

    So until they create a decent Windows client I'm stuck with Spotify.
    • What's wrong with using your phone for streaming?

      • What's wrong with using your phone for streaming?

        Mobile bandwidth is expensive, in some countries mobile coverage sucks, when you cross a border you become a 'robbery by roaming' victim, ...

      • by fuzzyf ( 1129635 )
        Just a personal preference.
        I like to keep focus on my two screens when working. So if someone calls on Teams or anything I would prefer not to change headsets or needing to stop music on a different device.
    • Ah, but like you said, iTunes does act as an Apple Music client on Windows. If installing an application is forbidden, there's the web version at music.apple.com.

      • by fuzzyf ( 1129635 )
        It's not just about installing it. iTunes is a terrible client to use, and even more so when trying to use it just to play music.

        I did try the web option, and I guess that could be an option. But it would be so much better with a small efficient native client to do the job (imho).
    • by GoJays ( 1793832 )

      Setup a plex server for your music library.

      It has a web based client, a desktop app, a phone app... you get to keep control of your library, but also have all the conviences of a streaming platform.

      • by fuzzyf ( 1129635 )
        I do have a Plex server but it try to avoid exposing it on the internet.

        Looked into using Plex when I considered purchasing Sonos, but it turns out that Sonos itself require SMB v1 to access a fileshare (which is out of the question) or you need to publicly expose your Plex server in order for Sonos to use Plex (which is also out of the question).

        Actually when I think about it, that would also be solved by using Apple Music.
        Hm. Really hope they make a Windows client. That would solve all my music probl
    • Apple music has a web player. Music.apple.com. I tried to check the link to be sure, but everytime i enter the address in Safari, it opens the apple music app on my ipad.

      Fuck i hate when Apple does this shit. I specifically told safari to go to http://music.apple.com./ [music.apple.com] I expected hypertext back. It interpreted my command and gave me something else. What a shitty future we find ourselves in.
  • Point in case: I've left the Apple Mac/macOS Camp a few years back after 13 years of being a pleased and happy customer. Their post-Jobs low-end pricing has lost any value proposition to me and recently their product lineup has started to become flaky and bloated, a bit like back in the day when Apple was about to die and Steve Jobs came back and redid Apple from the bottom up.

    They still build good stuff and my machine from work is a Touchbar MacBook and it's quite OK. But this Apple Music thing is one of

    • Again, this isn't some cheap-ass Chromebook (where the playbutton would actually do what it is supposed to) and this also isn't any of that MS Losedows crap that comes bloated with ads and annoying in-your-face noise by default.

      Ironically, it would also do what it's supposed to do on a cheap windows laptop. Tell us again how windows is crap. I mean, it is, but that fact makes your argument kind of hilarious.

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      Fun thing for you to consider. Is key part that "value proposition of Apple products continues to decline" or "in my book".

      Because a lot of people as they get older and wiser lose the incentive for displaying outward status with items. At which point, re-evaluation of "is this thing I used to use actually good enough for the purpose I want it for without the extra value granted the displaying of status aspect of it" may drive you to that very same conclusion.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        So the 13" Touchbar MBPro I'm using right now costs north of 2k Euros. It's a luxury product with enough performance and memory to be feasible for contemporary professional web development - i.e. 5-4 Chrome/Blink/Electron Apps and Stacks plus an IDE running simultaneously without the machine making too much noise or bucking under load.

        "is this thing I used to use actually good enough for the purpose I want it for"

        As I understand Qbertino's comment in the context of the field of web application development, only a premium MacBook meets these two requirements:

        1. The machine has enough RAM to run several desktop applications, each of which contains its own separate copy of Chromium because a multi-platform runtime resembling the web environment increases the convenience to the application's developer, without thrashing swap.
        2. The machine is licensed to run an operating system that lets the user test the client side of

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          That seems to run contrary to his reasoning why it's no longer a product that is not worth it to him. The need to code workarounds for that specific scenario is still there, and in your scenario, that is the vendor lock-in. It's literally irrelevant what other companies make and how competitive they are in point 1.

    • Point in case: I've left the Apple Mac/macOS Camp a few years back after 13 years of being a pleased and happy customer. Their post-Jobs low-end pricing has lost any value proposition to me and recently their product lineup has started to become flaky and bloated, a bit like back in the day when Apple was about to die and Steve Jobs came back and redid Apple from the bottom up.

      They still build good stuff and my machine from work is a Touchbar MacBook and it's quite OK. But this Apple Music thing is one of those things that get me super-pissed. Let me explain: So the 13" Touchbar MBPro I'm using right now costs north of 2k Euros. It's a luxury product with enough performance and memory to be feasible for contemporary professional web development - i.e. 5-4 Chrome/Blink/Electron Apps and Stacks plus an IDE running simultaneously without the machine making too much noise or bucking under load. Neat stuff. This luxury class machine has a regular play button just like any other respectable computer these days, along with a set of other mm function buttons + expose, dashboard, misson control and all the other neat and fancy default Apple stuff. So far so good.

      Now here's the kicker: Whenever I press that play-button, regardless where my current input focus is, Apple Music starts up and smacks an Apple Music ad into my face, regardless wether I'm tracking the logs of a running process or right in the middle of debugging a backend. Again, this isn't some cheap-ass Chromebook (where the playbutton would actually do what it is supposed to) and this also isn't any of that MS Losedows crap that comes bloated with ads and annoying in-your-face noise by default. This is a luxury priced, luxury branded "quality" product that someone just dropped 2+ grand on that comes with effing Pop-up Ads!! I literally had to invoke my expert skills and search the web for a solution which does exist: It's an open-source macOS daemon package that you install and runs a F*CKING SYSTEM SERVICE that prevents the playbutton from triggering this Apple Music subscription thing.

      In a nutshell: The value-proposition of Apple products continues to decline in my book. And I couldn't be bothered less wether Apple Music became a native app or not.

      Wow, a manifesto. Do you par chance live in a cabin in the woodlands of Montana?

      • [...] So the 13" Touchbar MBPro I'm using right now costs north of 2k Euros [...]

        Wow, a manifesto. Do you par chance live in a cabin in the woodlands of Montana?

        I think we may need to summon a Bobby to apprehend this particular Unabomber, mate.

    • by fuzzyf ( 1129635 )
      I think this is a trajectory for Apple these days.

      Just take the touchbar. Defaulting to do application specific tasks, like if you start Teams and start a sentence with "I", it will suggest that you can now move your hands over to the touchbar and press "I" since it detect that you might want to write that. (?!)

      I realize this is more a Teams issue than Apple issue, but it seems post-jobs Apple is more focused on "What can we do?" as supposed to Jobs' "What would the user like?" approach.

      Well, they di
      • The beginning of Apple's decline in intuitive and useful hardware & UI design goes back to when they decided we have been using the scrollwheel on a mouse the wrong way for 15 years. About the same time some bozo at Apple decided that Save As should be replaced, by default, with a cumbersome Duplicate functionality. And also around the same time they decided that after 10 years, the default functionality of the green window button should change from expand-shrink to window-fullscreen. Oh, and let's

  • i stopped using the current Music app when apple decided to pester me for a subscription nearly every time i launched the app. i don’t suspect the new version will be any better.

  • by iampiti ( 1059688 ) on Friday December 17, 2021 @09:29AM (#62090057)
    I don't use Apple products but I'm happy to see a company actually caring about performance and making a webapp into a native app in an age where everyone seems to be going in the opposite direction (turning native apps into Electron-based bloated monsters).
  • Let's hope I can again sync my devices with iTunes and that my music collection can be played without the "can't be played in this country" message that pops up for a bunch of my songs. Songs that I've ripped from my CDs. It's been like that for several years now no matter what I try to correct it. I picked up an Android phone a few months back when my old iPhone bailed and it works better in that regard but my playlists and Genius lists are still on my iPhone X and iPad Pro.

    [John]

    • by bjb ( 3050 )
      Hopefully there is more they're fixing.. I recently posted on StackExchange (with no answer yet) that I have a very large iTunes collection from years of collecting and ripping CDs. In the past, "Get Album Artwork" usually did a decent job, but not always. If I look back about 10 years, there was an old script called 'FetchArt' which plugged into iTunes and did a great job of filling in the gaps that iTunes couldn't on its own, but I think it has gone way-stale at this point.

      When I upgraded the library

  • I'm sorry, but Apple Music is categorically the most annoying music app there is. If I even so much as touch the buttons on my bluetooth headphones, whoosh - up comes Apple music asking if I'd like to "get started". There's absolutely no way to turn it off, unless you fancy turning off OS protection and deleting the binaries for it. I believe Wikipedia describes it as "abuse of the user".

    It's such a simple thing that so many vendors get wrong: Just because you try to trick, force or cajole users into doing

    • The real problem here, is that the average user is a moron, and these kinds of things are made for the average user.
      I bet if you asked your typical Apple Music user about this, they wouldn't know what you mean.
  • I expect incoming lawsuits.
  • 1) iTunes/TV/Music (to buy) isn't easily searchable (like, seriously, add advanced search) 5% chance this will happen
    2) Please, for the love of god, stop hiding options with every revision . . . give us a console with plists to configure stuff 0% chance
    3) When playing music and we say "play " - we don't mean thier songs in alphabetical order AND when you sort album by artist, you go from OLDEST to NEWEST -- we get it, you're using a record-store model, but stop calling it 'music' if you cant get this sim
  • Music.app needs different changes, like not being anything like a webpage. It needs to go back to being a listbox you can search. It takes 10 times as many clicks to find music now than it did twenty years ago. Music.app behaves completely unpredictably now.

  • stripping off the iTunes and Music Store format into a user UX app domain eliminates fairplay accusations. Apple can point to user’s choice .vs. Apple sandbox offering.

    Smart move on Apple’s part with changing perception around its market influence.

  • I recently upgraded from Mojave to Monterey, after holding onto my 32-bit apps for as long as I could, and holy hell was the new Apple Music a major regression over the old iTunes:

    - Song search filter not shown by default and disappears when you change views, with no way to always show it
    - Search is slow as hell: when I type in the name of something to search for, the CPU spins for about a second for every character I type (iTunes had no trouble with this in my library of 62,000 songs)
    - The timestamps showi

  • Spotify and Sonos work better for me, and it's extremely annoying that the Music app steals a bunch of file extensions. (Causing it to open unexpectedly.) Why can't I delete the Music app again? Oh yeah.. to keep my OS "secure" or some BS. Maybe someone should look into forcing Apple to unbundle these apps from the OS, like Microsoft was forced to do in the 90s.

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