85 points

Pipewire is a true blessing for Linux

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63 points
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Official Release Page for those who don’t want to read the Phoronix article: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/releases/1.0.0

It’s great to see that Pipewire has reached this milestone. Personally I’ve been using it since 0.3.35 for very basic audio needs and it’s been a very smooth transition. After installation I never had to tinker with it anymore. "It just works"TM

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7 points

I had to do some tinkering way back to make my bluetooth earplugs be recognized as an audio device.

Not sure if that is still needed today

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3 points

No

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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59 points

Genuinely one of the best pieces of software that these heroes are giving away.

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54 points

I’ve seen so many audio changes on Linux. But Pipewire is the first one without any negatives.

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30 points

Yeah it’s basically Pulseaudio, but better. The devs have done a great job on iterating upon the already pretty good pulseaudio!

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4 points

It’s more like JACK for desktop. PA was never good, just obvious bad design.

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21 points
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I’d have to disagree with that. It wasn’t perfect and there were issues for many people at the beginning, but it united everything properly.

Before then (in xmms days), don’t forget that audio in apps constantly didn’t work, and the sound servers often conflicted. It was far from a seamless experience.

But, pipewire I agree doesn’t seem to have any downsides and finally fixes from what I felt was the last major issue (low latency)

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10 points
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PA works on most case tho. Can’t deny all the good it did.

Also, is JACK any good?

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29 points

For a long time, people shat all over pipewire and said it wasn’t viable as a replacement for the existing Linux audio stack, but clearly that hasn’t ended up being the case

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20 points

I’ve heard nothing but good, and replacing Pulseaudio was painless. It was Pulseaudio that people hated on in my experience

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12 points

When it was brand new there were some edge case bugs that broke on certain workflows and hardware, but that’s pretty much entirely fixed now and I’m guessing for a long time now it’s been more universally stable than pulseaudio was.

Also, some people just pointlessly dislike anything that’s new, or because it breaks their spacebar heating

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