undervillain":2a6w64j2 said:...nor were they as tightly and efficiently programmed as Winamp. Even today, the Mac version of the Winamp installer is only 4.2MB; by comparison, the iTunes Mac installer comes in at a whopping 170MB.
Did you really just compare Winamp to iTunes?
I won't deny that Winamp is a preformant application, but you're comparing apples to oranges. Remember that in addition to (most) of the features of Winamp (I don't believe that iTunes is skinnable....at all....), iTunes also has to manage movie and TV show libraries, ebooks, ringtones, and applications, provide an online store of each of these formats, syncronize with iPods, iPhones, iPads, and iTVs, provide network music streaming, syncronize contacts, calendars, email, and notes...
undervillain":2otnv288 said:...nor were they as tightly and efficiently programmed as Winamp. Even today, the Mac version of the Winamp installer is only 4.2MB; by comparison, the iTunes Mac installer comes in at a whopping 170MB.
Did you really just compare Winamp to iTunes?
I won't deny that Winamp is a preformant application, but you're comparing apples to oranges. Remember that in addition to (most) of the features of Winamp (I don't believe that iTunes is skinnable....at all....), iTunes also has to manage movie and TV show libraries, ebooks, ringtones, and applications, provide an online store of each of these formats, syncronize with iPods, iPhones, iPads, and iTVs, provide network music streaming, syncronize contacts, calendars, email, and notes...
Uh, yea. When iTunes came out, it didn't do all that shit either.undervillain":2hmlubut said:...nor were they as tightly and efficiently programmed as Winamp. Even today, the Mac version of the Winamp installer is only 4.2MB; by comparison, the iTunes Mac installer comes in at a whopping 170MB.
Did you really just compare Winamp to iTunes?
I won't deny that Winamp is a preformant application, but you're comparing apples to oranges. Remember that in addition to (most) of the features of Winamp (I don't believe that iTunes is skinnable....at all....), iTunes also has to manage movie and TV show libraries, ebooks, ringtones, and applications, provide an online store of each of these formats, syncronize with iPods, iPhones, iPads, and iTVs, provide network music streaming, syncronize contacts, calendars, email, and notes...
solomonrex":qob9lp35 said:This was a great look back, I was astonished (probably like all Americans) to see the Winamp name in the Android store. Bit of an ironic name, isn't it? I ended up with doubletwist on my phone, and holy cow it made a difference. Android feels like a real ipod/iphone competitor now. Funny how little things like lock screen player controls can make such a big difference.
nomadofnorad":321k0zme said:I have had WinAmp as my primary music player program on all the Windows machines in this household since at least 2001. I am listening to streaming music on it right this second, in fact.
undervillain":2x288u9y said:...nor were they as tightly and efficiently programmed as Winamp. Even today, the Mac version of the Winamp installer is only 4.2MB; by comparison, the iTunes Mac installer comes in at a whopping 170MB.
Did you really just compare Winamp to iTunes?
I won't deny that Winamp is a preformant application, but you're comparing apples to oranges. Remember that in addition to (most) of the features of Winamp (I don't believe that iTunes is skinnable....at all....), iTunes also has to manage movie and TV show libraries, ebooks, ringtones, and applications, provide an online store of each of these formats, syncronize with iPods, iPhones, iPads, and iTVs, provide network music streaming, syncronize contacts, calendars, email, and notes...
Man, I'm really disappointed to see a bunch of Arsians talking about iTunes and Winamp, in the context of the late-90s/early-00s era, and see no mention of SoundJam. For those of you who were too young (or don't remember), iTunes is not an Apple original product. The original software was the (quite good) SoundJam MP, and product by the very long established classic Mac dev Casady & Greene (who also did Conflict Catcher for example). SoundJam MP was quite similar to Winamp in many respects. As well as playlists and the compressed focus it was fully skinnable and had some great visualizers for the time, back when we cared about such things. It was a fast and effective commercial program, I know I still have it (along with an image of my old Classic system from just before I made the jump to the OS X 10.0) somewhere, wish I could remember my favorite skin.Boskone":2o2hslfw said:Uh, yea. When iTunes came out, it didn't do all that shit either.undervillain":2o2hslfw said:...nor were they as tightly and efficiently programmed as Winamp. Even today, the Mac version of the Winamp installer is only 4.2MB; by comparison, the iTunes Mac installer comes in at a whopping 170MB.
Did you really just compare Winamp to iTunes?
I won't deny that Winamp is a preformant application, but you're comparing apples to oranges. Remember that in addition to (most) of the features of Winamp (I don't believe that iTunes is skinnable....at all....), iTunes also has to manage movie and TV show libraries, ebooks, ringtones, and applications, provide an online store of each of these formats, syncronize with iPods, iPhones, iPads, and iTVs, provide network music streaming, syncronize contacts, calendars, email, and notes...
If WinAMP development hadn't (been) stalled, they would have kept adding features, management, signed distribution deals, etc.
I paid for WinAMP back in the day, but WinAMP 3 was too friggin' huge. Been kinda jumping programs since.
FuriousLopez":1k8xk2v4 said:If everyone would just buy their music with Amazon.com already we could stop all the nonsense at once. DRM free, cheap, and NO GODDAMN ITUNES.
I would SO much rather give my money to Amazon and help fund space exploration than itunes and fund a new spaceship style HQ. Wouldn't you?
Now, there is an iPhone in my pocket....but hey, all the MP3s are from Amazon.![]()