Grayjay for desktop has arrived! (grayjay.app)
from Sunny@slrpnk.net to technology@lemmy.world on 20 Dec 23:21
https://slrpnk.net/post/16373891

What is Grayjay?

Grayjay is a cutting-edge app that serves as a video player and source aggregator. It allows you to stream and organize videos from various sources, providing a unified platform for your entertainment needs.

It’s mostly used as a YouTube frontend^. However, it is now launching as a desktop app for Linux, Mac and Windows.

#technology

threaded - newest

parpol@programming.dev on 20 Dec 23:47 next collapse

Yes, finally! I’ve been using the mobile app, and it has been nothing but amazing.

Fizz@lemmy.nz on 21 Dec 00:35 next collapse

That’s awesome. I love the grayjay mobile app. I need more non YouTube creators to follow though

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 21 Dec 00:42 next collapse

The peertube app recently launched and its pretty decent for a first release

CaptDust@sh.itjust.works on 21 Dec 02:47 next collapse

Grayjay mobile is awesome, very much looking forward to checking this out. Love how it puts all my YouTube, Patreon, Twitch and Peertube content in one place.

sic_semper_tyrannis@lemmy.today on 21 Dec 03:06 collapse

95℅ of the time my Patreon feeds fail to load. This isn’t your experience?

CaptDust@sh.itjust.works on 21 Dec 03:52 collapse

There’s an occasional error popup during playback, but the feeds and video still work here. I’m on Grayjay v268 w/ Patreon v17

My biggest issue is Peertube tbh, discovery is difficult, border line useless.

sic_semper_tyrannis@lemmy.today on 21 Dec 03:09 next collapse

Is there a Flatpak?

parpol@programming.dev on 21 Dec 04:14 collapse

Not yet. Had to manually download.

ownsauce@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 08:59 collapse

I am linux noob, they provided a .zip file for linux. Do I need to use the command line to install it?

WereCat@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 13:36 collapse

You just unzip it and run it

ownsauce@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 16:22 collapse

Thanks. I’m running PopOS Cosmic Alpha and it doesn’t like the executable, and since its in alpha there’s features missing in this DE that would allow me (linux noob) to easily install it. I’ll try installing Grayjay again when my OS / DE is in beta or something.

confuser@lemmy.zip on 21 Dec 17:17 collapse

Pro tip from one Linux noob to another, chatgpt allowed me to take the leap from not understanding Linux well enough to make it work on my own to making it work and doing a few advanced things.

Chatgpt has pretty decent usefulness even without buying the subscription nowdays if you don’t want to do that, so glad I did this!

ownsauce@lemmy.world on 22 Dec 04:55 collapse

Thank you, that helped. I used perplexity and double checked the sources (so I don’t end up running hallucinatory code).

I was able to get it running

Jayb151@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 03:23 next collapse

Mobile app has been the best YouTube app replacement I’ve found. And I just got the pop up about the desktop app on my drive home from work. Will for sure check it out.

I wish it more closely mirrored YouTube’s native video suggestions, but it’s pretty damn close.

communist@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz on 21 Dec 03:40 next collapse

Does it have tabs? if not I can’t see myself caring.

parpol@programming.dev on 21 Dec 04:14 collapse

It doesn’t look like it does. It has multiple stackable windows, though.

Interstellar_1@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 21 Dec 03:43 next collapse

Hopefully there’s light mode

MITM0@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 04:02 next collapse

I really wish there was a truly open source version of GrayJay because GrayJay is actually Not OpenSource

airglow@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 04:48 next collapse

Yikes. I’ll be sticking with NewPipe and other FOSS apps.

ledix@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 05:37 collapse

It is open source, just not free open source

Dave@lemmy.nz on 21 Dec 06:03 next collapse

Typically licenses not OSI approved are referred to as “Source available” rather than “Open source”. This is one reason FUTO (who make Grayjay) refer to their license as “Source first” and not “Open Source” (though they did call it that for a while before clarifying and switching to the new term).

TootSweet@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 06:13 next collapse

And by “clarifying” you mean “dunking on Open Source and parading around like the saviors of the human race for inventing Open-Source-except-with-donation-nags-to-fund-their-fully-for-profit-business.” Good job, guys, you’ve solved enshittification (/s).

iopq@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 06:46 next collapse

One of the goals of source first licenses is to stop enshittification since it doesn’t allow paid clones

Not saying I agree with their policy, but I would hope more for-profit businesses make their source code available

MITM0@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 12:50 next collapse

This is basically Proprietary Licencing in a way

TootSweet@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 20:51 collapse

One of the goals of source first licenses is to stop enshittification since it doesn’t allow paid clones

Copyleft prevents enshittification much better than anything in their license. If someone makes a paid clone of some, for instance, AGPL 3.0 program, one person can buy it and release the source code of the paid version and then all of the improvements can be incorporated back into the version from which it was forked.

Unless the paid clone makers go so far as to break the terms of the license. But that’s not a problem that the Grayjay license solves any better than the AGPL 3.0.

Grayjay’s license is itself a textbook example of enshittification.

Not saying I agree with their policy, but I would hope more for-profit businesses make their source code available

I’m not pissed at FUTO for releasing their source code under a non-FOSS license. I’m pissed at them for doing everything in their power to sabotage Open Source specifically to serve their bottom line while also pretending they’re some champion of consumer rights in tech. And it’s really shitty to use a .org address to further drive home the lie that they’re anything but a for-profit company fucking over consumers to make a profit.

iopq@lemmy.world on 22 Dec 06:46 collapse

The original clone keeps making money from people who don’t know any better, even if it’s an exact replica. Just look at the windows app store

TootSweet@lemmy.world on 22 Dec 06:54 collapse

Why is that a problem?

iopq@lemmy.world on 22 Dec 07:44 collapse

Because that’s how unsuspecting people get spyware and viruses. Sure, the clones must publish their source code, but that doesn’t stop them from profiting from open source software while contributing nothing

LordWiggle@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 08:32 next collapse

But they do provide a good alternative for watching videos on multiple platforms without ads, without subscriptions or anything. And the app works if you don’t pay as well. Just because they ask money for their hard work while at the same time allowing the community to work with it sounds all good to me. It’s just not completely open source and completely free. But feel free to make a non-profit true open source counterpart if you like :)

TootSweet@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 20:57 collapse

I don’t mind them asking for money. As I said just a moment ago in another comment, “I’m pissed at them for doing everything in their power to sabotage Open Source specifically to serve their bottom line while also pretending they’re some champion of consumer rights in tech.” I wouldn’t honestly be as pissed at them if they a) had just admitted from the get-go that they were a for-profit company with no actual interest in improving/solving enshittification and b) had never coopted the term “Open Source” or dunked on Open Source.

But feel free to make a non-profit true open source counterpart if you like

I don’t need to.

Dave@lemmy.nz on 21 Dec 09:22 collapse

Haha yeah I do find the licence a bit weird. Kind of a non-commercial licence but there are definitely some parts that I don’t quite get.

I have seen Eron Wolf talking a bit about what he is trying to do. I get his frustrations, but am not convinced their licence helps with those at all. You can’t really take open source, take away some freedoms that are sometimes taken advantage of, and pretend that removing those freedoms didn’t remove the benefits that are the reason those freedoms existed in the first place.

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 21 Dec 13:21 next collapse

My take: OSI needs to include noncommercial licenses. Companies like Mongo and Redis have to end up creating their own licenses with GPL poison pills just to survive commercial use, why not create a system where companies that want to be, and support, an “open source” ecosystem can thrive?

Open Source existed before OSI.

airglow@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 15:13 collapse

Proprietary source-available software existed before open source software, and that’s what these restricted licenses are. The FOSS community does not appreciate businesses co-opting the term open source to promote software that doesn’t grant users the right to use the source code for any purpose.

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 22 Dec 01:36 collapse

As a member of the FOSS community, and someone who has written an absolute truckload of FOSS software, I stand by what I said.

Open Source was coined before OSI was formed. OSI, and the previous launch of GNU by Stallman, was to combat the new (at the time) practice of only releasing machine code and the commercial vehicles that came along with it.

The original spirit of sharing source code for projects in academia, before software required so much more effort, still exists in licenses like SSPLv1, etc, that are not adopted by OSI.

I, personally, think this is a bad decision.

I, personally, feel that an organization that wishes to make their products source-available, especially those that allow noncommercial modification, should be recognized for that, not punished or gate kept.

I, personally, would love to see OSI adopt an open attitude towards those types of organizations, and create another official tier in the lexicon with it’s own set of standard licenses that fit under it.

I understand and accept that other’s don’t feel that way, but that does not make their opinion about what should count as “open” any better than my own, just more widely accepted at the time.

airglow@lemmy.world on 22 Dec 05:08 collapse

Nobody has any objection to companies making their source code available, and they are free to call their software “source-available”, “source-first”, or some other term because their source code is available. But if they restrict what users can do with the software, then it isn’t open source. MongoDB, Redis, and even FUTO now all recognize this distinction.

The FOSS community, at large, doesn’t tolerate the watering down of recognized terms such as “open source” by bad actors who want to co-opt the term for marketing while denying users the right to use open source software for any purpose. That is known as openwashing. This kind of misappropriation is not welcome in any kind of movement, not just the FOSS movement.

The free software and open source software movements both support rights for users, which include the right to use free software and open source software for all commercial purposes without restriction. These movements support the release of source code as one requirement for ensuring these user rights, but source availability is not the only requirement for a piece of software to be open source.

There’s no problem with creating another classification of restricted source-available licenses as long as it isn’t called open source, a term rooted in the open source software movement’s adoption of the Open Source Definition for over 20 years.

As for myself, I personally prefer source-available software over software with no source available, though I also prefer FOSS over restrictively licensed source-available software.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 21 Dec 18:34 collapse

U hate it when companies start with those mental gymnastics exercises to pretend they’re open source so they can get more people that way

You’re open source or you’re not. In this case, you’re not, so stop pretending. It makes me want to try your app even less.

Dave@lemmy.nz on 21 Dec 19:18 collapse

They have talked a bit about what they are trying to do. It’s backed by Silicon Valley billionaire Eron Wolf, and he has talked about his frustration with everyone putting their blood, sweat, and tears into the software and then someone like Facebook comes along and makes billions from the work of others.

I get it’s frustrating, but personally I think it fails to see that Facebook is part of the ecosystem, but also so are many small companies, and many of these are contributing back to the software. If you remove the companies then you have removed a significant source of help. Eron wants to replace this with an expectation that people pay for their software, he wants to normalise paying for OSS so OSS doesn’t have to rely on the companies. You can see this in how FUTO keyboard using language implying you need to pay to get a license, but also it holds no features back from you and doesn’t nag if you don’t pay.

Personally I welcome new ways of thinking but even if the pay for your OSS thing works I think companies are uniquely placed to contribute in ways that a small team relying on purchases is never going to be able to replicate.

I don’t hold any ill will though, I think their heart is in the right place, albeit having missed what makes FOSS special.

MITM0@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 08:53 next collapse

It’s proprietary

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 21 Dec 13:18 collapse

No it’s not. SF license allows for noncommercial modification, and it is Source Available.

[deleted] on 21 Dec 15:18 next collapse

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MITM0@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 18:04 collapse

So Proprietary

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 21 Dec 22:24 collapse

Again, no. The article you link specifically mentions problems with proprietary software that FUTO dislikes, not that Grayjay is proprietary.

The definition: www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/proprietary

Grayjay’s license does not fit this definition.

MITM0@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 18:03 collapse
Cossty@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 06:11 next collapse

Still can’t set the video speed above 2.25x? Otherwise it’s useless to me.

qyron@sopuli.xyz on 21 Dec 08:01 collapse

You’ll have to teach me how you can follow/enjoy/understand any media at such high speed before I can understand your statement.

Cossty@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 14:44 next collapse

Gradualism

At first I watched every YouTube video on 1.5x for like 6 months.

Then I watched everything on 1.8X for another 6 months. Then 2.2x and so on.

Now I watch everything between 2.8x and 3.6x, Depends on the talking speed of the person in the video. I can understand everything.

Of course I watch some videos in normal 1x speed but those are usually just like artistic videos or movie trailers and stuff like that. If there is just a person talking to the camera, there is no reason for me to watch it in normal speed.

qyron@sopuli.xyz on 21 Dec 15:00 collapse

And what is the reason for doing that?

Cossty@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 15:26 collapse

I thought that was obvious. Time.

You would not believe how much time I have saved over the years by doing this. When I can finish 30m video in less than 10 minutes.

I don’t know about you, but when I come home from work, I don’t have a whole evening to just watch yt videos.

This way I can finish the videos I wanted to watch a lot sooner and then I can go and do something else.

qyron@sopuli.xyz on 21 Dec 15:50 collapse

I struggle with that same issue. I’ll risk nine out of 10 people suffer from it. There are only twenty four hours in a day.

In my understanding, that is not a good way to make better use of your time. I’m glad it works for you but makes no sense whatsoever.

If you do that for, to my understanding, speeding through dialogue heavy content, you’re essentially following podcasts. You can do many things while listening anything, at normal speeds.

Cossty@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 16:52 collapse

When I am cooking, cleaning, etc, I listen to audiobooks. Not at those same speeds as YouTube videos. Between 1.25x and 1.8x, depends on a narrator again.

qyron@sopuli.xyz on 21 Dec 18:20 collapse

Not trying to pry into your intimacy but what is motivating such a concern for speeding up your media consumption rate?

Cossty@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 20:30 collapse

I don’t know what to tell you. It looks like to me that you seem to think that somehow I am wasting my enjoyment of the media. Or that my consumption of the media isn’t the right one or fulfilling or something like that.

As I said before, I can understand everything. Why should I listen to or watch something in normal speed? It’s just a waste of time in my case.

When somebody can hit a target that is 300 meters away, why would you tell them to shoot at the target that is only 100 meters away? What’s the point in that for them?

I don’t know if that is a good analogy, but I don’t know how else to explain this.

qyron@sopuli.xyz on 21 Dec 21:25 next collapse

Genuine curiosity.

Blisterexe@lemmy.zip on 21 Dec 23:18 collapse

imagine someone told you they ate bananas sideways because it’s faster and cleaner. That’s probably how they feel.

rumba@lemmy.zip on 22 Dec 02:00 collapse

There are some YouTubers that are easily understandable at those speeds. Watching them at 1x is like watching paint dry.

I rarely watch anything below 1.5 unless it’s dense or I genuinely like their cadence.

LordWiggle@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 08:19 next collapse

Epic!

QuantumSoul@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 21 Dec 09:50 next collapse

I am working on an alternative

Sunny@slrpnk.net on 21 Dec 09:56 collapse

Spill the beans!

[deleted] on 21 Dec 15:27 next collapse

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Zomg@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 18:55 collapse

Oof, couldn’t help yourself huh?

QuantumSoul@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 21 Dec 21:29 collapse

Cannot release yet because I need to “plugin out” the youtube part which was integrated directly into the flutter app in my earlier builds, will be open source

Sunny@slrpnk.net on 21 Dec 21:40 collapse

All good, look forward to seeing what you have made 😊

zerozaku@lemmy.world on 21 Dec 15:51 next collapse

Why can’t they be a website than an app for Dekstop?

Also understood that they’re not open-source but are they privacy-respecting?

Edit: Went through their privacy policy and seems they’re privacy-focused. I will be trying their app now.

Sunny@slrpnk.net on 21 Dec 16:44 next collapse

Yeah if you know who’s behind Futo (Louis Rossman) you will know he fights very hard for better privacy across the board among other things that are better for us consumers.

Edit: Futo being the company behind this app and other privacy respective apps.

TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works on 22 Dec 01:33 collapse

when it comes to right to repair he’s amazing. that being said, however, he hasn’t had much positive to say about the SteamDeck which is leagues ahead of something like the Nintendo switch in terms of user freedoms and customizability.
Granted that’s like one take I disagree with compared to ALL he’s done but I’m still surprised he hasn’t made a followup about how much good it’s done for Linux in general considering he’s been using Linux since it was in a physical box lol

Blisterexe@lemmy.zip on 21 Dec 17:16 collapse

the app is source available, it places some restrictions on modifications of the source code, but the code is fully available

hal_5700X@sh.itjust.works on 22 Dec 00:07 next collapse

It’s an alpha release, so expect it to be buggy. Overall this is a good thing. We need more frontends.

oldfart@lemm.ee on 22 Dec 08:16 collapse

That zip file is just one command away from an appimage