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Oxodao 19 hours ago [-]
Creative commons... For what exactly ? It seems to be a closed-source project anyway since there's no code in this repo..
chrisallick 15 hours ago [-]
i think i just swapped out MIT for that on a whim. ill delete it. i was going to sell the audio player when it reaches the next major version.
hilti 11 hours ago [-]
Looks interesting, but missing notarization and source code gives me a headache in this world of vibe coded apps. But glad you enjoyed the afternoon with Claude and get a personal reincarnation of Winamp for your box.
chrisallick 10 hours ago [-]
I think what I'm getting at is that if you have architectural and engineering experience, coding with claude isn't vibing at all, but like having a paired programming partner. and i think the real headache and heart break is a closed world, top down corporate, web and software experience.
joenot443 19 hours ago [-]
Did you mean to include the code in the repo...?
chrisallick 17 hours ago [-]
no just the binary release at the moment.
chrisallick 1 days ago [-]
The 90s and early 00s were an era of personal computing, self-expression, rapid technical expansion, the web. We were barreling forward at the speed of innovation and culture, and for a brief period, the utopia of new media and self-expression were fueled by the imagination. And then... it stopped. Hotline, KaZaa, Lime Wire, Napster, Tumblr, ICQ, AOL Messanger, IRC, Usenet, Winamp... remember WinRAR? All became irelevent really quickly, either due to legal restrictions or gutting of communities and platforms. Many artists have reflected on this, but I feel at this moment in time we're seeing that passion creep back through the cracks of the corporate chokehold on open web.
Light Crime aims to create modern software with a cozier personal computing approach. Spotify is great. Apple Music is meh but no ICE ads, and yet... they still separate you from your media and personal space. All the tools and technologies still exist, sitting dormant, but maybe people have moved on, or recesses to small corners of the web.
When I started coding it was with BASIC and Visual Basic 3. What a joy! But now, with the advent of paired programming with tools like Claude Caude, I don't have to worry about the labor intensive time suck of building something that cuts against the grain of modern technology. What I would have said "eh who is going to use that?" is replaced with "Who cares, I can spend an afternoon and be done with it." So I'm going through my backlog of software and art work I want to see in the world. And am no longer stuck in the mind trap of wondering how it fits into the current culture of social media and peopel's relationship to software.
ahem ... Anyways, I think curating your music on your computer is fun. Making playlists is fun. And generally, just enjoying your computer rather a terminal to SaSS platforms is refreshing in 2026. Enjoy. - chris
coyote7oni 15 hours ago [-]
It's unclear how it changed your life.
chrisallick 13 hours ago [-]
read below? or in the readme. remember when that guy said he loved visual basic 6 and is rediscovering his love of software with claude code? my write up speaks to the same sentiment and personal computing and why i fell in love with technology.
Light Crime aims to create modern software with a cozier personal computing approach. Spotify is great. Apple Music is meh but no ICE ads, and yet... they still separate you from your media and personal space. All the tools and technologies still exist, sitting dormant, but maybe people have moved on, or recesses to small corners of the web.
When I started coding it was with BASIC and Visual Basic 3. What a joy! But now, with the advent of paired programming with tools like Claude Caude, I don't have to worry about the labor intensive time suck of building something that cuts against the grain of modern technology. What I would have said "eh who is going to use that?" is replaced with "Who cares, I can spend an afternoon and be done with it." So I'm going through my backlog of software and art work I want to see in the world. And am no longer stuck in the mind trap of wondering how it fits into the current culture of social media and peopel's relationship to software.
ahem ... Anyways, I think curating your music on your computer is fun. Making playlists is fun. And generally, just enjoying your computer rather a terminal to SaSS platforms is refreshing in 2026. Enjoy. - chris