#10996 closed enhancement (duplicate)
Add missing features to CddaFS and deprecate CDPlayer in favor of it
Reported by: | waddlesplash | Owned by: | bga |
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Priority: | normal | Milestone: | R1 |
Component: | File Systems/cdda | Version: | R1/Development |
Keywords: | Cc: | ||
Blocked By: | #9065 | Blocking: | |
Platform: | All |
Description
This is hrev47449.
- Insert audio CD into drive
- Open CDPlayer
- CDPlayer claims it is playing but no sound comes out
- Open the "Audio CD" from the Desktop and open one of the tracks in MediaPlayer
- Sound comes out
I vote to wipe CDPlayer off the face of the earth and give the CD-as-WAV filesystem support to lookup CDDB, which is the only thing CDPlayer can do that it can't do right now.
Change History (10)
comment:1 by , 10 years ago
comment:2 by , 10 years ago
This is a duplicate of ticket #9065. SATA cd/dvd audio is not supported in Haiku.
comment:3 by , 10 years ago
vidrep: No, MediaPlayer can play the files just fine. tqh: That should happen automatically without having to open Cortex.
comment:4 by , 10 years ago
Waddlesplash: Yes I know MediaPlayer works, but the CDPlayer app does not work with SATA drives. However, an IDE drive with a audio cable will work.
comment:5 by , 10 years ago
Component: | Applications/CDPlayer → File Systems/cdda |
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Owner: | changed from | to
Summary: | CDPlayer does not work → Add missing features to CddaFS and deprecate CDPlayer in favor of it |
Type: | bug → enhancement |
Ah, OK. Since someone else agrees with me, I'll make that the topic of this bug report.
comment:6 by , 10 years ago
Blocked By: | 9065 added |
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Resolution: | → duplicate |
Status: | new → closed |
It is a duplicate indeed.
The option of direct replay in CDPlayer style is nice to have on computers that support it, because it uses absolutely 0 CPU (the audio is forwarded from the CD drive directly to the sound card using a special cable). The feature is sadly gone from newer computers, making CDPlayer useless in that case. I'm not sure it's possible to reliably detect if the needed cable is plugged.
comment:7 by , 10 years ago
Not that I still use CDs these days, but in the olden days the advantage of CDPlayer over a CDDA based player was that the former would cause the drive to run at constant -- more or less silent -- 1x speed while the latter would cause -- very noisy! -- high speed bursts.
comment:8 by , 10 years ago
Waddlesplash, the sound doesn't really involve the computer. It is the internal hardware and amplifier in the cd. You wouldn't even need a soundcard to listen to cds. So try to understand that cdplayer does not play sound. It only controls play / pause / skip on the CD. Kind of like a remote.
comment:9 by , 10 years ago
bonefish: Actually, I think many people now just rip the CDs to their HDDs, and in that sense, CDDAFS is pretty good.
tqh: I understand. :) I'm saying that since most people no longer are on PCs that have this hardware, we should remove it from Deskbar so people aren't confused. If anyone wants it, they can start it from the command line or create a symlink themselves.
You need to connect the cdplayer hardware to the soundcard and raise the volume for that input. It's a different audio path. For connecting headphones to the player and such.