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Chrome Music Youtube

Google Chrome Beta For Android Now Lets You Play YouTube In the Background (techtimes.com) 51

The recently released version of Chrome on Android -- v54 (albeit in beta) -- finally brings a feature that users have been requesting for years: it lets them play YouTube songs in the background. Much like some of you, there are many out there who prefer listening to songs on YouTube instead of getting a subscription or otherwise downloading a music-streaming service. From a TechTimes report: With version 54, Google introduced a handful of updates to Chrome Beta. The new version introduces a handful of features that include background video and playback and a redesigned new tab page, among others. Among the features that are packed in the said beta version, background video playback is perhaps the most significant. In older iterations of Chrome, including version 53, videos will get paused once a new app is opened or after switching to the home screen. In version 54 beta, the videos will still get paused automatically but Android users are provided with an option to resume them via a media notification. Audio from the video will continuously be heard while using other apps.
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Google Chrome Beta For Android Now Lets You Play YouTube In the Background

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  • Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)

    by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Monday September 19, 2016 @12:01PM (#52917601)
    I wonder if it will stay after beta. You get this in the youtube app if you play for google play music (which I do for other reasons). It is a nice feature to have, but I do not see them giving it away for free when it is an advertised premium feature in another app.
    • I do not see them giving it away for free when it is an advertised premium feature in another app.

      You know, this was the #1 requested feature for the YouTube app for years and then Google finally implemented it but made it a $120/yr option and threatened lawsuits against apps that provided the capability already if they didn't withdraw from the market. It was probably the most Evil thing I've ever seen Google do.

      XPosed Framework has a module that remedies this problem. I would have been glad to pay $10 fo

      • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
        It is not 120 a year just to play in the background. The main features are streaming from a large catalog of music and uploading your own library for streaming/backup. This pricing is on par with other music streaming providers and just happens to add background play with it.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Great job fixing the symptoms, not the underlying cause, Google.

    The reason we need this hack is because Android essentially stops any application that is not on the foreground (if memory pressure becomes an issue, the application is killed instead). It's a bit more complicated that that, but this is the gist of the problem.

    If Android had some option for "minimizing" applications - a "get this application out of my face, but DON'T close it, dammit!" button - we wouldn't need this hack, which, I bet, is not e

    • Because playing a video in a background where 90% of the downloaded data is wasted is not a problem...

      • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

        Because playing a video in a background where 90% of the downloaded data is wasted is not a problem...

        Well, if it's not a problem then why are you even mentioning it?

      • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
        I know with play music if you switch off the youtube app it stops buffering/rendering the video portion of the stream. Whether chrome is smart enough to signal lost focus to youtube for this is another question.
    • Spoken like a person who's never designed battery-powered systems. People do not understand the distinction between backgrounded and killed. You might (perhaps maybe) but the general user does not. Add to this the general incompetence of your average "app" writer, and you're left with hundreds of background threads keeping your CPU wake and making your battery life shit. What android does (and iOS too) is the only sane thing to do when on batteries: do your best to make as few things run as possible. Have
      • you're left with hundreds of background threads keeping your CPU wake and making your battery life shit

        Wait! Wasn't that what the Fandroids all kept calling "True Multitasking", and made fun of iOS because it suspended most "backgrounded" Apps?

      • by w1z7ard ( 227376 )
        Except that android's audio api keeps going through drastic changes and/or deprecations. Quite annoying as I maintain a music visualizer which needs to sniff the audio signal.
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Well, obvious answers have non-obvious consequences.

      I remember when Windows Vista came out. It was roundly reviled for many things, performance being one of them. But in fact its average performance wasn't that bad. The real problem was premature optimization; Microsoft pulled every trick they could imagine to tweak the behemoth's average performance but the result was the speed at which the UI responded was inconsistent. Users adapt to a UI having a certain rhythm; and if that rhythm is inconsistent the

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The reason we need this hack is because Android essentially stops any application that is not on the foreground (if memory pressure becomes an issue, the application is killed instead)

      That's how iOS used to work until recently (when real multitasking was added). Any time you started a new app, the previous one's state was saved and it was killed. "Switching" to the previous app meant saving the state of the current app and killing it, then restoring the saved state of the previous app. This gave the ill

    • Sure. That's why i am totally unable to listen MP3 music on my phone while using other apps - or none at all.

    • Waze runs fine in the background, downloads run fine in the background, Spotify runs fine in the background ... never mind, you just don't know how Android works.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    simply to listen to audio are probably the same dumbasses complaining about bandwidth caps.
    • It does seem stupid at first glance, but I have found a number of songs available on YouTube which are not available for (legal) streaming or download anywhere else. The video typically consists of a still image of the album artwork, so the extra bandwidth is negligible. And with YouTube Red (the paid service that also gets rid of ads and comes bundled with Google Play Music), you can download videos instead of streaming, so there's no hit to your data plan.

  • by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Monday September 19, 2016 @12:36PM (#52917855)

    I have a bad habit on the PC of leaving tabs open and coming back later to finish reading something or start following links. Often I end up with multiple browser windows with multiple tabs in each. It becomes a real problem when some damn auto play ad or news story starts up and I can't even find which window it is in to shut it down. So now Google is setting up Android so that so that the browser will play unseen videos in the background. Nobody wants that!

    And if you're thinking "I could run music on YouTube in the background", get a clue. You can already play background music with apps like Pandora or Slacker or several Internet radio apps, and that will waste much less bandwidth, data and battery power.

    • if you're thinking "I could run music on YouTube in the background", get a clue. You can already play background music with apps like Pandora or Slacker or several Internet radio apps, and that will waste much less bandwidth, data and battery power.

      It is actually possible to get audio only from youtube with a chrome extension. It would be nice if this were made a central feature of the platform, though. There's lots of shows which are essentially podcasts.

      On the other hand, I use Firefox, and I can already "watch" a Youtube video in a background tab. I get a little icon on the tab which lets me know that it's emitting audio, so that I can rapidly close it if that's what I need to do. I usually just use a downloader to watch Youtube videos, because my

      • I get a little icon on the tab which lets me know that it's emitting audio, so that I can rapidly close it if that's what I need to do.

        Yup, that works fine if you only have one window open. That's why I made a point of making it clear that I often end up with multiple windows open (lots of 'em) with tabs in each. Hard to find the source of the noise in that case.

        • that works fine if you only have one window open. That's why I made a point of making it clear that I often end up with multiple windows open (lots of 'em) with tabs in each. Hard to find the source of the noise in that case.

          While that's true, if you have a lot of open windows which are all making noise, I submit that there are other things you could do to improve your browsing experience. For one, you could be more choosy about which sites you visit. For another, you could use browser extensions which tend to block the kind of activity that produces unwanted noises. I very seldom hear a web page make noise when I'm not expecting it.

  • This was a "selling point" of YouTube Red. You can have shit run in the background in the YouTube app if you pay up. Of course, you could do this just fine, for free, before YouTube Red.

    Why would they be giving a YouTube Red feature away for free in Chrome?
    Why did they bundle YouTube Red with Google Play Music subscriptions?

    (Hint: No one is paying for YouTube Red.)

  • Everybody seems fixated on how to get an app to run properly in the background, but the problem isn't with the app, it's with the service provider. Instead of getting Chrome to play YouTube videos in the background, how about getting YouTube to allow streaming only the audio part of its content (probably including ads, but that's fine - it's the business they're in).

    That way, millions of developers can try their hand at creating the perfect apps for using this content, instead of doing something counterprod

  • I can't stand Chromes "my way or the highway" attitude on stuff.
    I spent over an hour last night, looking for a tool or function which will stop Chrome shrinking tabs to literally 1/4 of an inch in width if you are an extreme browser and exceed 80 or 100 tabs open.

    You think I can find a simple "fix tab width" plugin? of course I found a heap of posts from people dating back through 2012, 2011, 2009 asking for a "hey, how can I stop Chrome making my tab width miniscule when I open a shitload of tabs?"
    Typical

  • Now that Google is offering their YouTube Red subscription service (granting access to commercial-free YouTube and some exclusive content) this makes perfect sense. And background playing of music is already available with the YouTube Music app; Chrome is just catching up.

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

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