Do you think iTunes is bloated?

All non-Go discussions should go here.
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

xed_over wrote:
kirkmc wrote:I wonder how many people are using computers that are 6 years old.

rasied my hand already

kirkmc wrote: I find it interesting that people who are into games hardly every call games that require new graphics cards, more RAM and 10 GB of disk space bloated, but are more than happy to upgrade their computers often.

of course new game software is also bloated

Commander Keen still fits on a 1 meg floppy disk.


Floppy disk? What's that? :-)
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
User avatar
ross
Dies with sente
Posts: 92
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2010 4:40 pm
Rank: DGS 9k
GD Posts: 1315
Location: シアトル
Has thanked: 24 times
Been thanked: 36 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by ross »

I would recommend you take CarlJung's advice to heart. When you're correct, you look rude; when you're incorrect, you look foolish. Neither is a state I think you want to be in.

kirkmc wrote:You're really not reading what I said. I explained about the gapless thing; you haven't replied that you understood what I said. It's not a "feature" that's slowing you down; it's the program scanning your files _once_. I am "validating" your experience; but I'm telling you that what your doing is wrong. Will you accept that, let the program scan your files once and for all, and move on?

First of all, you're incorrect about the gapless thing—clicking the "x" will disable the scan permanently for those files (or at least it did on my version). Secondly, as I've mentioned several times, the fact that it can be disabled or only runs once has nothing to do with the fact that the existence of the feature directly contradicts your statement that "if it has features you don't want, they don't slow things down." Will you accept that?

I am very interested in why people think iTunes is bloated.

Here is my definition of bloat:

If program X and program Y exist with a similar featureset, and they both perform the task I need, but program Y runs considerably faster or more smoothly or in less RAM or with a smaller CPU or hard drive, then program X is bloated. If the reason X runs slower than Y is because of poor programming practices, then it's code bloat. If the reason X runs slower than Y is because of additional features that I don't need, then it's feature bloat.

For example, in the debate xed_over describes, I think that emacs is bloated. Vi has a similar featureset, but runs in less RAM and is faster in many cases, and contains all the features I use. Therefore emacs is bloated. Somebody who actually uses those features (similar to someone who actually uses all the features of iTunes) might have a different opinion on the matter.

By my definition, which I think the Wikipedia article shows is a common one, iTunes is bloated. Similar programs exist which take up less memory, run faster, and have a smaller installation footprint than iTunes. I will continue using those programs on my Mac Mini with 512mb of RAM—they work perfectly fine without swapping or requiring expensive upgrades.

(BTW, you can't have only 512 MB RAM unless you removed some of your RAM; the Mac mini has never shipped with less than 1 GB.)

Again, this predilection for disbelieving the other person's statements does not serve you well. As a matter of fact, my Mac Mini is only a couple of years old, but I removed one stick of RAM because it had become physically corrupted. I haven't bothered to replace it because all the programs I run, which are not bloated, execute perfectly well in 512mb of RAM with little or no swapping.
User avatar
wms
Lives in gote
Posts: 450
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:23 pm
GD Posts: 0
KGS: wms
Location: Portland, OR USA
Has thanked: 257 times
Been thanked: 287 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by wms »

Kirk, what I find really hilarious is that here you put up a post asking for opinions about something for an article that you are writing.

Then people gave you their opinions.

Then you argued with them and told them they were wrong. :lol: It was my understanding that usually when you did opinion research, you took the opinions and said "thank you" then wrote your article. Whether they are right or wrong, they are the people's opinions, and that is what you asked for. To first argue until everybody agrees with your opinion, then write the article...well, why even bother asking for opinions in the first place?

Or maybe this was all a ruse, and you don't care about the article, but just wanted to start up a good argument? That's the only way I can make any sense of this thread, but even in that case, there are much easier ways to start an internet argument!
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

ross wrote:
kirkmc wrote:You're really not reading what I said. I explained about the gapless thing; you haven't replied that you understood what I said. It's not a "feature" that's slowing you down; it's the program scanning your files _once_. I am "validating" your experience; but I'm telling you that what your doing is wrong. Will you accept that, let the program scan your files once and for all, and move on?

First of all, you're incorrect about the gapless thing—clicking the "x" will disable the scan permanently for those files (or at least it did on my version). Secondly, as I've mentioned several times, the fact that it can be disabled or only runs once has nothing to do with the fact that the existence of the feature directly contradicts your statement that "if it has features you don't want, they don't slow things down." Will you accept that?


A feature that can be disabled, at least in iTunes, is one where you turn something off either via a menu, or via a preference. What you did is, in effect, click on a Cancel button; that X button does the some if you're, say, importing a CD, or converting files to another format. It does not turn the feature off.

What I suspect happened is that, one day, you didn't click it, it analyzed all your files, and now it doesn't bother you any more. If you want to prove that, add a bunch of files to your library, and see if you see that Analyzing Gapless Files message; you will.

Sorry about misunderstanding about your Mac mini; I had been led to believe that there were no Mac minis with that amount of RAM. But actually, your case is different, and it's good of you to point out. However, I can't imagine you use the computer for a lot, because no matter which version of Mac OS X you're using, 512 is very low, and will lead to swapping almost immediately.
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

wms wrote:Kirk, what I find really hilarious is that here you put up a post asking for opinions about something for an article that you are writing.

Then people gave you their opinions.

Then you argued with them and told them they were wrong. :lol: It was my understanding that usually when you did opinion research, you took the opinions and said "thank you" then wrote your article. Whether they are right or wrong, they are the people's opinions, and that is what you asked for. To first argue until everybody agrees with your opinion, then write the article...well, why even bother asking for opinions in the first place?

Or maybe this was all a ruse, and you don't care about the article, but just wanted to start up a good argument? That's the only way I can make any sense of this thread, but even in that case, there are much easier ways to start an internet argument!


Well, I was trying to get people to explain if and why they have this opinion, and to discover what the root of this feeling is. On my blog, interestingly, people had much more nuanced opinions than here. Because it's one thing to have such an opinion, but it's another to prove that it is indeed founded. That's the curiosity I'm trying to figure out.

Regarding, for example, the memory question, I have been trying to point out that, in most cases, such a concern is unfounded. I've said enough about memory management, and if people still think that the amount of memory that any program uses - be it iTunes or anything else (CGoban, for example, often claims to use over 200 MB on my Mac), then they're remembering a past when such issues were indeed important. (Though if they have 6-year old computers, it may still be an issue; I have no idea whether Xp, for example, manages memory in a way similar to Mac OS X.)
Last edited by kirkmc on Wed Jun 09, 2010 10:02 am, edited 1 time in total.
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
averell
Dies in gote
Posts: 61
Joined: Tue May 04, 2010 7:14 am
GD Posts: 0
Has thanked: 57 times
Been thanked: 19 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by averell »

wms wrote:Or maybe this was all a ruse, and you don't care about the article, but just wanted to start up a good argument? That's the only way I can make any sense of this thread, but even in that case, there are much easier ways to start an internet argument!


No there aren't.
amnal
Lives in gote
Posts: 589
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2010 10:42 am
Rank: 2 dan
GD Posts: 0
Been thanked: 114 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by amnal »

I had no computer other than an old laptop with 512mb ram, 1GHz processor and a 30gb hard drive for most of the last 4 years. This is more than enough to do what I needed to; write things in emacs, compile it with LaTeX, listen to music with amarok, play go on KGS, etc. etc. Relatively bloated software like firefox and openoffice didn't work so well, small light alternatives worked nicely when necessary.

I don't accept the argument that I should spend money on newer hardware just because I can - it's clearly bloated if it needs more power to do the things I already can do. Maybe itunes has features I can't even conceive of, and so don't realise I'm missing, but...it doesn't seem probable. And so, in comparison to software which does work on my laptop (I don't think itunes would run well, looking at this thread...), itunes is bloated.
Last edited by amnal on Wed Jun 09, 2010 10:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
wms
Lives in gote
Posts: 450
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 4:23 pm
GD Posts: 0
KGS: wms
Location: Portland, OR USA
Has thanked: 257 times
Been thanked: 287 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by wms »

averell wrote:
wms wrote:Or maybe this was all a ruse, and you don't care about the article, but just wanted to start up a good argument? That's the only way I can make any sense of this thread, but even in that case, there are much easier ways to start an internet argument!


No there aren't.

Image
User avatar
ross
Dies with sente
Posts: 92
Joined: Wed Apr 21, 2010 4:40 pm
Rank: DGS 9k
GD Posts: 1315
Location: シアトル
Has thanked: 24 times
Been thanked: 36 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by ross »

kirkmc wrote:A feature that can be disabled, at least in iTunes, is one where you turn something off either via a menu, or via a preference. What you did is, in effect, click on a Cancel button; that X button does the some if you're, say, importing a CD, or converting files to another format. It does not turn the feature off.

Ah, kirkmc—I see you still cannot admit that there exists a feature in iTunes that exists that slows things down for people who not use it, but insist instead on these side arguments which are beside the point. Now we're in a semantic debate on the meaning of "disabling a feature". It is almost too amusing to watch.

However, I can't imagine you use the computer for a lot, because no matter which version of Mac OS X you're using, 512 is very low, and will lead to swapping almost immediately.

I suspect you either have a very poor imagination, or you have not been schooled in the Unix tradition. As a media center computer, it works beautifully to play music, movies, browse the web, capture video, and even do a little software development.
User avatar
GoCat
Lives with ko
Posts: 163
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2010 6:27 pm
Rank: 5K or so
GD Posts: 163
KGS: GoCat
Location: Oregon
Has thanked: 8 times
Been thanked: 23 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by GoCat »

Very interesting discussion going on here. Note that the thread title is "Do you think iTunes is bloated?", not "Is iTunes bloated?" In other words, Kirk is asking (whether he realized it or not) for our perception of iTunes' bloatedness, not any actual empirical evidence of same. And, since the question is about perception, it's bound to get a range of responses.

So, here's mine...

In general all major software is now huge -- requiring faster processors, more memory and more disk space. I think it has gotten this way for a couple reasons: First, features have to be added in order to sell newer versions. Second, I think some SW makers keep trying to create systems that users don't need to struggle to learn -- they want it do "work right out of the box". This requires that they keep adding more and more UI features that ease the user's experience. This is especially true for OS's. (Whether that has worked is quite debatable, of course.) Third, SW designers tend to ignore RAM and disk requirements -- even CPU is less important than it used to be. If a new SW package is a bit slow (or bloated) today, it won't be tomorrow -- and SW designers know that.

There's been talk of features that you need or don't need. Again, SW tends to keep adding features, because staying put doesn't work in the competitive market. So we end up with packages that do what we want and that do a zillion other things that we don't care about. If you're like me, you learn the bits that you use, and never get around to learning all the rest. This is certainly true in Word-like packages (actually, I use OpenOffice), in high-end graphics, and possibly in iTunes as well. In my work (hardware design), I use SW tools that have vast feature sets -- and I tend to learn what I need to get my job done, and only skim the rest just to know what's there. (The tools are memory/disk/cpu hogs but that's a necessity of their function.)

Also, I wonder if this question is being asked in the wrong place. Go players, I think, tend to be more tech-savvy than the average user. What response would you get if you asked in a forum oriented toward music lovers? I don't really know; but it would be interesting.

Finally, again, the question itself: Rather than asking this yes/no question, maybe you (Kirk) actually want to ask something along the lines of: "If iTunes appears bloated to you, why is that?" And then, of course, acknowledge that this is a request for a subjective response, and don't bother correcting any mis-perception of iTunes. If users see iTunes as behaving like X, but in reality iTunes should behave like Y, then is that a user problem or an iTunes problem?
Marcus
Gosei
Posts: 1387
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 8:51 am
GD Posts: 209
KGS: Marcus316
Has thanked: 139 times
Been thanked: 111 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by Marcus »

ross wrote:... or you have not been schooled in the Unix tradition. ...


<snip>

I don't think the whole Philosophy applies in this instance. It is the basis for my own opinion, true enough, but it is not directly related, IMHO.

kirkmc wrote:I wonder how many people are using computers that are 6 years old. I upgrade my hardware roughly every three years, because, in part, for my work I need to be more or less current. I tend to see a lot of people I know - those not in the business like me - upgrading every 3 or 4 years, though Macs tend to be functional longer than PCs, so there are a fair amount of people who keep Macs as much as 6 years.


Not to beat the point to death, but my current PC (bought in 2004) was to finally replace my Pentium that went more than 10 years, with one RAM upgrade 5 years into its life. That Pentium brought me through the majority of my University years, with no issues for any of the programming tasks I needed it for. While I knew a number of my techie friends who did upgrade their system on average every 3 years (which seems to be the average time I hear from a lot of people) ... they were the enthusiasts. Like me, they dug into technology in depth, but unlike me they had the money to try and keep up, or they were avid gamers and so NEEDED to keep up.

However, in 2002 when I was doing some PC support on the side to pay for books, it seemed like the average PC I worked on for non-students (older folks who were not in the technology industry) was about 6 or 7 years old (at which point I recommended they consider looking at a new budget PC, and often built it for them if they decided to do so). Perhaps that's changed, but those were the people I was frequently helping back then ... NOT the enthusiasts but the everyday PC owners who don't care as long as it works.

kirkmc wrote:I can certainly sympathize with your opinion that much software is bloated. I don't necessarily agree, but I can understand where you're coming from. I find it interesting that people who are into games hardly every call games that require new graphics cards, more RAM and 10 GB of disk space bloated, but are more than happy to upgrade their computers often.


There's a difference between an application like iTunes and a Major Release Title. A Major Release Title is meant to be a fully immersive experience. Gamers expect the best games to use every resource available to deliver the most awe-inspiring experience their system can muster. It is for that experience, and not for the software itself, that they upgrade their system.

For most people, iTunes is a utility program. It's not supposed to take your full attention, so in the minds of many users it should take the minimum of necessary resources to function. The problem that a program like iTunes runs into is the other software options that it gets compared to by those users. Because iTunes does so much more than a simpler program can, it will inherently require more resources. You know that, and I know that, and so does the end user, usually. But software is easy to install, and end users are used to piling multiple programs onto their PCs regularly. Because of this, end users will ignore functionality in iTunes that they do not need when comparing it to software that does only what they do need. This is a very important aspect of understanding the end user. If you provide functionality in a software program that the user does not need or use that functionality does not exist for that user. Half the things you've mentioned about iTunes in this thread are things I was completely unaware of concerning the functionality of iTunes ... even though I've used iTunes frequently enough.

Hmmm ... I'm starting to think I need to finally get my blog going. Seems like I always have a lot to say. ;)
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

ross wrote:
kirkmc wrote:A feature that can be disabled, at least in iTunes, is one where you turn something off either via a menu, or via a preference. What you did is, in effect, click on a Cancel button; that X button does the some if you're, say, importing a CD, or converting files to another format. It does not turn the feature off.

Ah, kirkmc—I see you still cannot admit that there exists a feature in iTunes that exists that slows things down for people who not use it, but insist instead on these side arguments which are beside the point. Now we're in a semantic debate on the meaning of "disabling a feature". It is almost too amusing to watch.


Look, Ross, I'm sorry if you don't agree with me. I have written dozens of articles, and two books, about iTunes, and I know what it's interface is. I also write user manuals, and know what a "feature" is. What you did is clicked a "Cancel" button, you didn't disable anything. If you don't want to believe this, there's not much more that I can say.

And, as I said earlier, it doesn't "slow things down for people who do not use it"; it is simply an analysis of files when you add them to your library, or, perhaps, the first time you updated the library when the gapless playback feature was added. As the Mac OS X Hints thread you linked to said, all you need to do is wait for it to finish, then get on with what you want to do.
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

GoCat wrote:Also, I wonder if this question is being asked in the wrong place. Go players, I think, tend to be more tech-savvy than the average user. What response would you get if you asked in a forum oriented toward music lovers? I don't really know; but it would be interesting.

Finally, again, the question itself: Rather than asking this yes/no question, maybe you (Kirk) actually want to ask something along the lines of: "If iTunes appears bloated to you, why is that?" And then, of course, acknowledge that this is a request for a subjective response, and don't bother correcting any mis-perception of iTunes. If users see iTunes as behaving like X, but in reality iTunes should behave like Y, then is that a user problem or an iTunes problem?


Yes, I asked the question in a music forum, and the answers are quite different, because all of the people there are serious music fans (classical music listeners with large music collections) for whom music player software is very important.
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
xed_over
Oza
Posts: 2264
Joined: Mon Apr 19, 2010 11:51 am
Has thanked: 1179 times
Been thanked: 553 times

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by xed_over »

kirkmc wrote:I certainly respect much of what you say, but talking about the disk space that a program like iTunes uses is pretty minor. After all, it's not taking up much _more_ disk space, because it's replacing your existing program. And, to be honest, at least on Mac, I haven't seen a big increase in memory requirements for iTunes. Anyway, how would you know that if you don't upgrade?

I do upgrade. I just avoid it for as long as possible.

And the fact that it takes up _any_ more disk space means its getting bigger. I can't afford to keep buying terabyte disks. It does matter.

kirkmc wrote:I think the "installation footprint" - ie disk space - argument is specious at best. I only see that as an issue with games, or with, say, Adobe Creative Suite. Talking about a program that's less than 200 MB on the disk as taking up a lot of space with the size of hard disks people have (even with your 4-year old Mac) is looking at a non-problem. If you're that short on disk space, you have other problems than just a single program to worry about.


there's this single program, and the other single program that I also use, and this other one too, and that one over there... they all add up.

kirkmc wrote:As to your final point, I don't think users have been saying "yes". I think a small subset of users have. Interestingly, the comments on my blog are mostly in the "no" camp, and many comments I've gotten elsewhere seem to agree with that sentiment. I think there are a handful of tech writers who have grabbed onto this meme and propagated it, but when asking others, I've found that, in many cases, people who said "yes" then considered what they said, and, instead of just "yessing" out of reflex, came back and said that, in fact, they didn't feel that way.

Do have a look at the comments on my blog post. There are some interesting points there, which have not been raised here.

yeah, out of the 26 responses on your blog, 4 out of 5 felt its bloated.
User avatar
kirkmc
Lives in sente
Posts: 1072
Joined: Tue Apr 20, 2010 3:51 am
Rank: 5K KGS
GD Posts: 1165
KGS: Dogen
Location: Stratford-upon-Avon, England
Has thanked: 32 times
Been thanked: 70 times
Contact:

Re: Do you think iTunes is bloated?

Post by kirkmc »

xed_over wrote:yeah, out of the 26 responses on your blog, 4 out of 5 felt its bloated.


I don't see how you counted 4 out of 5...

BTW, the place where the most people consider it bloated is an audiobook forum. This makes sense, of course, because the majority of those people are only using it for audiobooks, so consider that any additional features are unnecessary. (Some use it for music, but not many.)
Last edited by kirkmc on Wed Jun 09, 2010 11:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
My blog about Macs and more: Kirkville
Post Reply