BladeEnc Development Officially Discontinued 16
skojt writes: "I saw on the Swedish site gnuheter.org that Tord Jansson has announced that he discontinues
development of BladeEnc. He says that he is tired of lawyers, that Lame does a better job for the average user and that Ogg Vorbis is a better choice." BladeEnc fans need not worry too much, though -- Jansson also says on the site "My devotion to the free software movement is as strong as ever and I just love to tinker with code, so you can be quite sure that you haven't seen the last of me yet."
Re:wow (Score:3, Interesting)
I haven't been keeping track, but I doubt that this is the first time someone has dropped their own project because they don't think it's good enough. Most of the time they just fall into obscurity.
I agree that to some degree this is a good thing. I wish the GNOME and KDE people would do it. ;-) But seriously, these types of "bad" projects are really a good thing--it gives the inexperienced a chance to practice the craft. These sorts of projects only cause problems when they are over-hyped and/or many other projects start to require using stuff from these lame and bloated projects.
I did think BladeEnc was fairly good, however I stopped using it myself. Why? I had two problems with it it:
I say good luck to Tord Jansson, and I hope to see more open source projects from him. On his homepage, [mp3.no] it appears he is trying to start his own company [worldonline.se]. Good show!
Re:wow (Score:1)
It was also pretty cool when GIDE and Anjuta merged.
It was not like you suggested something really implausable like OpenOffice porting to Gnome.
KDE Gnome merger is never going to happen, the advantage for commercial interests of using gkt remains even and is an option worth keeping even for those who prefer the KDE desktop.
The language difference between KDE and Gnome is also a big deal.
But that is no reason for use to not to want interoperability and a better unified more coherent vision of open source.
It is tragic that no distribution was willing to pick up the X Setup tools, too much vested interest in their own custom tools.
http://primates.ximian.com/~chema/xst
Maybe some one will port them to Gtk2 and debian. There seem to be gradually more and more people who get that usuability and accesibility are important even if they dont necessarily know anything about it. the potential for having nice graphical admin tools with standardised config files and being able to remote update the rest of the network based on the configuration of your test machine is just awesome.
while we are being unfairly branded as trolls i definately think some of the video media player programs need to be culled. my money is on gstreamer surviving and maybe something based on xinelib too, dont know which KDE apps are best though.
Kudos to the author of BladeEnc, be cool to see what he does next.
aww man (Score:1, Redundant)
ah well, i cant blame him. lets hope he keeps the latest version available fFor a while.
i agree with his observations on Ogg Vorbis. it is basically better. but i think until it is a little more widely used, i'll stick with blade.
thanks fFor a good run!
What next??? (Score:3, Interesting)
I also agree with his interpertation of MP3 and how the owners of the format have made it harder on developers as it became more widely accepted. I also agree that Ogg Vorbis is a better format than MP3. Vorbis is actually becomming very popular as a sound format for MPEG4-based video codecs (DIVX/XVID/etc). The main reason for this (besides the fact of higher quality and smaller size) is that OGG supports multiple channels (read AC3).
I would certainly be interested in seeing a new encoder by this author for the Ogg Vorbis format. I know that he mentions that:
Now, four years later, I feel more like eventually starting some new hobby project which lies closer to my area of knowledge and interest.
Of course, this is only a hope...I realise that directly before this he says:
My skills are in designing and building elegant and flexible systems for handling complex tasks in an optimal way, not dealing with FFTs, compression technologies or scientific models for subjective perception of audio.
Hopefully, BladeENC is merely a beginning for him. I think that, while he might not have the extensive background required for writing an encoder, that may very well be the one thing that sets his project apart from an encoder like LAME.
Is there anywhere to still download the binaries (Score:2)
I'd like to preserve it for posterity
Re:Is there anywhere to still download the binarie (Score:2, Interesting)
Perhaps he could work with the Theora project? (Score:3, Insightful)
If he's into multimedia and codecs and such. I'd love to see usable code come out of the Ogg/Theora project [theora.org] soon - especially an encoder...
He's obviously got talent and experience with related coding from BladeENC, and Theora has a similar goal ("free" multimedia for wide use)...
Not that I'm anxious to see Theora take off or anything :-)
Lame (Score:1)
Salvatore Meschini
http://salvatoremeschini.cjb.net/
http
http://membe
Goodbye BladeEnc (Score:1)
Salvatore Meschini
http://salvatoremeschini.cjb.net/
http
http://membe
So long, and thanks for all the ideas (Score:1)
Let's hope that its developer helps out with Lame or with Ogg Vorbis and its related technologies. I'm very impressed by Ogg as an audio format, and can see it rivalling Windows Media Audio in the not so distant future.