▲> The app does absolutely no work in the background. It works by simply existing as a running process, thanks to having the same bundle identifier as the Music app.
I love clever, low-or-no-code engineering solutions like this. You typically need to understand a systems very deeply to reach this level of elegance. In this case, one has to understand exactly what happens when the play button is pressed in Mac OS, how bundle identifiers work, etc. And the outcome is an app with almost no code at all – just a collision – it's beautiful.
(As an aside, coding agents are terrible at this kind of thing; I'd guess Codex as of right now would write some overpowered application that polls in a loop looking for Music App starts and killing them)
reply▲On the contrary, this feels like a great (hypothetical) example of how to use coding agents effectively.
> Codex as of right now would write some overpowered application that polls in a loop looking for Music App starts and killing them
Most human engineers would also do this. It's a relative rarity to find someone writing things this elegantly.
Similarly, if you asked an agent to "Stop the Apple Music app from launching", it would likely try to do what most humans would do. Otoh if you asked an agent to explain why the Apple Music app launches, based on the discoveries it presents to you from its investigation you would quickly discover for yourself that asking it to make a zero code app that collides with Music is the best course of action.
reply▲mikepurvis38 minutes ago
[-] Absolutely. Coding agents as a research companion to the curious are phenomenal, but they also amplify all the worst tendencies of "when all you have is a hammer".
reply▲enos_feedler58 minutes ago
[-] This is true. Outcomes correlate with the quality and depth of the conversation. The quality and depth correlates with the users understanding of computers
reply▲xiaoyu200639 minutes ago
[-] Reminds me that when I was in high school, my father used to regulate my gaming sessions with Apple ScreenTime. I changed the BundleIdentifier in my game's info.plist to `com.apple.systempreferences` and sign the .app with my own developer cert to bypass this. Was a lot of fun before got caught physically.
reply▲I still can't believe they killed iTunes. I used to have my entire digital music library in iTunes. Most of that was music I had ripped myself from CD, but I had a handful of albums I bought of iTunes and even some TV shows. When they wholesale abandoned iTunes and deleted from Mac OS in favor of...whatever Apple Music is, I knew I'd never trust them again.
I searched for some decent mp3 players for a while, and even used AIMP for a while, but nowadays I think I'll just vibe code my own with my own interface and rely on the local file system and folder mounts to do the job. I really love this new era where I can just use AI to build a custom thing for myself and forget about all the predatory crap out there, especially from the OS vendors. I don't need streaming, I don't want it. I would have kept buying albums off iTunes, but since it sucks so much I'll just buy it on CD, thanks.
reply▲You can turn off the cloud service in Apple Music and still use it with your local tracks and music downloaded from the iTunes Music Store (which still exists).
I did this for most of last year. I had all local music in Apple Music, disabled the cloud stuff, and synced it all to my iPhone by plugging it in with a cable, as if it was an old iPod. It all still worked.
reply▲dylan60430 minutes ago
[-] Turning off the cloud service just does the syncing thing right? What about turning off the Apple Music service so that the only thing visible is your local content? That's what pisses me off the most.
reply▲al_borland11 minutes ago
[-] That's what I meant by cloud services. It hides the Apple Music part so it defaults to your local stuff.
Thought if I remember correctly, search was still showing it, which was a little annoying. But it depends on how much you search.
I'm currently using the service right now, so I can't really check if anything has changed since last year when I was doing it.
reply▲thesuitonym9 minutes ago
[-] I've only ever used Apple Music with local content. On iOS the only indication to me that non-local content is even possible is the radio tab at the bottom of the screen.
On MacOS I think it opens to the online home page, but I use it so infrequently I'm not sure. I pretty much only use it to buy music from iTunes.
reply▲auxiliarymoose52 minutes ago
[-] Yep, I've been importing CDs to Apple Music (which I buy from my local music store) and adding them to my Android phone for personal listening. It's a great way to spend money on music in a way that supports local businesses!
reply▲The Music app reads the same library and has the same core music-oriented functions as iTunes. Is the interface what you're missing?
reply▲My main complaints are that it’s clearly store and subscription first, local music and playlists a distant second. Still works however.
reply▲Why vibe code anything? VLC would fit the bill. Even quicktime.
reply▲It's mostly that I want my own list management, key combinations, navigation, etc. Once the entire UI is my oyster, I realized I don't have to settle for how someone else decided to lay out the menus, etc. 25 years ago I would just learn all the key combos and be set, but 12 major iterations later, few to zero of those UI skills and muscle memory state has survived. So now, I can do my own and no one can take it away from me :)
reply▲I strongly recommend going this route (speaking from experience).
It is shockingly easy to build an opinionated UI for these things in a web browser. You need to implement m3u generation (or use a js web player), and some sort of hierarchical hyperlink based nav that matches your muscle memory. You should be able to use an existing service to grab cover art and metadata for newly ripped disks (unless those services disappeared over the years).
If you want to use a native GUI/TUI toolkit, I’d be shocked if an LLM had any trouble laying it out after a few rounds of refinement. (It definitely will not have any trouble doing this for web stuff.)
reply▲socalgal237 minutes ago
[-] That's the difference? I still use the Music app and it still behaves exactly as it did before they renamed it. I do not subscrbe to Apple Music. I still have my entire digital music libray in iTunes/Music and it functions as it always did.
reply▲I had an OO perl replacement for iTunes back in the day (to learn OO perl, mostly). It had a web frontend, and also handled ripping and cd metadata with “insert disk, up arrow enter”. It failed to eject the disk iff there was a problem with the rip / transcode / metadata. I had 3-4 CDROMs in a desktop for parallelism.
Maybe I should have an LLM port to rust. It was under a thousand lines of code.
reply▲sourcecodeplz39 minutes ago
[-] vibe code your own, implement some kind of yt-downloader? torrent downloader,etc, maybe some album art. hm might make one myself.
reply▲iTunes and iPhoto both. Given how good the tools are getting, and how much existing sample code is available, it seems likely someone will do a good job of reincarnating them in the near future. Apple broke the apps I used most on the Mac and then they added the bubblicious design crime UI, no thanks.
reply▲I found a WinAmp clone, written in Swift and AppKit, in the App Store yesterday. It was a month old, and from the description (ex. "No Electron, no bloat." and "No telemetry, no tracking, no accounts") it was almost certainly vibe coded. All the things it was saying were things I like, but written in a very AI way.
reply▲I think this is going to finally bring about the year of the open source desktop.
I’ll happily install that if I can see the source code, read it all in a sitting, and it is not terrible.
(Note that, in this model, if I want to futz with key bindings or other UI tweaks, I can just ask an LLM to change it. No configuration UI required! Just like evilwm.)
reply▲californical1 hour ago
[-] Check out Swinsian.
It is basically old iTunes with some UI improvements and modern features built around somebody who has their own library to manage.
Been around for a long time.
It’s great software that I’m willing to pay for in today’s world for sure.
reply▲The specification would matter more than the source it produces. Specify it right and share it with the world. Code is basically a winamp skin on the OS level.
reply▲forrestthewoods22 minutes ago
[-] iTunes is the single worst most rage inducing software I have ever experienced. It is the only software that has brought myself and numerous family members to literal tears. Its concept of “syncing libraries” in the early iPhone era was so unbelievably broken.
I wish I believed in software hell because then I would be happy knowing that’s where iTunes existed.
reply▲It's very sad to see Apple using these lowbrow Microsoft tactics. Press ganging your users into launching your other shit product is brand cannibalism.
reply▲But why wouldn't pressing the Play button, when no media session is available, not open the music player?
reply▲If there’s no media session available, “play” isn’t an action that makes any sense, so it shouldn’t do anything IMO.
reply▲Yeah, right? Seems obvious to me. If I press "Backspace" and there is nothing to go back to, or to remove, I expect the key to do nothing. Same for Escape, or Volume Up, or whatever. If it can't do what's expected, it does nothing.
Feels like at one point all the people who spent decades building OSes and desktop environment left Apple and Microsoft, and the people left are brand new developers who only been using computers for the last 10 years or something. Or something something executives/management, whatever fits your worldview better.
reply▲Probably gaming metrics. “87% of users used my team's program this month!” Who cares if 87% of those did it unintentionally? That's some other team's problem.
reply▲No other key on my keyboard opens an application. I don't see why there should be one special key that operates that way.
reply▲okamiueru30 minutes ago
[-] The insufferable part is not letting you disable it.
reply▲I don't use Apple Music, so opening their music player only wastes my attention and time. It happens if you accidentally press play on your headphones too. Then you need to quit Apple Music, for no good reason. And you can't uninstall it!
reply▲A similar scourge is encroaching on Google-branded android phones, as they add mandatory apps to cover stuff like supporting earbuds you don't own.
reply▲SauntSolaire48 minutes ago
[-] Are you talking about the pixel buds app? They ask you on setup if you want it installed, and you can uninstall it anytime. Seems pretty far from "mandatory".
reply▲Yes, that's the example I had in mind.
> you can uninstall it anytime
I'm sure it tells you that... but did you actually try?
The "uninstall" button is a lie: You cannot remove the app, you can only roll it back to some mandatory minimum version.
> Do you want to uninstall all updates to this Android System app?
If you "uninstall", the app still exists, and your only choice is to surrender and update it again. So yes, that "system app" is (as far as Google is concerned) absolutely "mandatory" on my phone.
reply▲It doesn’t, it opens Apple Music. Apple has a longstanding problem with giving their own apps privileged roles that they don’t expose to competitors. What concessions exist in browsers, maps, and music player are all the result of being forced into it by various lawsuits. Let’s not play games about what’s going on here.
reply▲But why wouldn't the OS developer, when many people don't use Apple Music, not offer users the ability to pick what the key does?
reply▲bloody-crow50 minutes ago
[-] Because this OS developer is also trying to sell you their Music service subscription. I'm sure having this setting would hurt some of their internal KPIs and therefore would never be implemented.
reply▲I think they’re wrong for this, though I’d read a steelman of why not
reply▲There’s a strong argument for tight integration-the argument for NOT allowing customization is much weaker.
reply▲> not open the music player?
I'd be fine with it doing that if it actually opened what i listen with. The OS can clearly see i spend 100% of my time in another music player (Spotify), opening Apple Music is at best a poorly designed UX.
reply▲You can't uninstall Apple Music as far as I am aware, so it is not just a "music player" but a specific app, which I personally don't use. For the play button I at least see the point, but it opens it when you insert an audio CD, for example. Even Windows asks what to do in a notification.
reply▲> You can't uninstall Apple Music
Internet Explorer bundling was an instruction manual!
reply▲Because it's not the music player I choose to use. I would be ok with it, if I could change the default to e.g. VLC or Spotify.
reply▲or turn it off entirely because guess what? Most people are accidently hitting this play/pause button or they hit it thinking youtube is going to respond and instead they get Apple's seriously shite music player. classic apple no respect for me and my choices.
reply▲YouTube does respond to it though?
reply▲sometimes you can have a youtube video that is paused, and you hit play/pause button thinking it will unpause it but for whatever reason that video seems to not be registering as being unpausable so OSX thinks there is nothing to unpause, so it opens itunes, it's one of the reasons apple was cited under geneva convention violations for unusual weaponry last year
reply▲Mainly want that button for pausing a video to play music or vice versa. Don’t love the logic (which will it play, or pause?) but maybe it’s about as good as it could be without more complexity like first press pauses background playback, second press begins foreground playback. (Could probably script that now that I say it, an easy Hammerspoon or something.)
reply▲But why isn't there an easy option to turn the "feature" off? Why the kluges and workarounds for Apple going downhill (Microsoftean is indeed a good term here) for a while now? Same story for the nasty notifiction system, the annoying finder "spacebar may preview some random file hopefully without too many security vulns" (the low contrast design whereby you think Firefox is in foreground but it's actually the Finder is another bad design element that contributes to mixing up what the active app is), etc etc etc
reply▲lynndotpy55 minutes ago
[-] One scenario:
1. You have an iPhone, a Macbook, and AirPods.
2. You are listening to a podcast or song on your iPhone using your AirPods.
3. You press your AirPods stem to pause the podcast or song on your iPhone.
4. You press your AirPods again, expecting to continue the podcast or song on your iPhone.
5. Your AirPods are now connected to your Mac, which is opening Apple Music. This takes a long time to complete.
Note that you can not remove the Music app from MacOS without serious compromises to MacOS. It is a slow, awful resource hog that I personally never want to use, and it rubs me the wrong way. My impression of Apple is much lower for it.
reply▲LollipopYakuza31 minutes ago
[-] Spotify is open almost all of the time for me. If no song is playing, it's likely that it's paused. So I press play expecting it to resume, and sometimes Spotify is actually just not open.
reply▲It cannot assume which media player I want to use, so the best course of action is to do nothing.
reply▲It's very reasonable that pressing "play" opens the default music player. They should let you choose.
reply▲antoineMoPa33 minutes ago
[-] There are multiple different sources that the user might want to start playing. Browser tab A/B/C (example: web radios), a music application or music service website in a tab that's not even opened yet (eg: spotify), the last video tab they opened (ex: youtube).
Whatever is the last thing that was paused should play IMHO. If nothing was paused, it should do nothing. Else, you open a pandora's box of possibly wrong choices that the user then has to close.
reply▲parl_match6 minutes ago
[-] > Whatever is the last thing that was paused should play IMHO
That's currently how it works.
This is purely an issue and complaint for when nothing at all was playing or open, and an app hasn't currently registered a handler.
If you land on a fresh desktop from reboot and press play, what should happen?
reply▲The best course of action would be to let the user specify their default music app to bind the keys to.
reply▲Let me change the default music player
reply▲overgard41 minutes ago
[-] Because the key press is ambiguous and probably unintentional if nothing is open. If the question is "play what?" then it shouldn't guess
reply▲Because this f%#n sh*t is jumping at you and is in your way promoting itself and want to configure and engage right away, or start some random item remained there when you in interim loss of your senses tried this crap, every time you press play instead of 8 or 9 by mistake, accidentally! But you don't want to start it, ever, anyway, that's why!
reply▲Because i have no songs and never used apple music and every time it opens (because I pressed the key by mistake) within seconds it gets closed. Doesn't even need ai to figure this out.
reply▲This question is fascinating. The reason why pressing the Play button when no media session is available should not open the music player is because there is no media session available. Why would launching Apple Music be the desired or even expected behavior?
reply▲They are obsessed with killing Spotify.
Similar situation in the past: Microsoft vs Netscape.
reply▲These kind of things backfire very hard. I will never ever use Apple Music whatever products, never. Just like those drawn to this remedy like flies to sugar. They make so shitty and offensive user experience that supporting them by not avoiding the vicinity of it is a crime against humanity! Basically supporting bullying kind of behaviour.
Why not to have a simple way to turn this offensive behaviour off? Nonsense. It is intentionally offensive and forceful! Straight forceful behaviour that needs to be cut down at the sprout! Otherwise it will multiply and suffocate you down the line.
Too much of the product designers adapt this arrogant attitude, Apple is just a (sizeable) drop in the sea!
reply▲some_random33 minutes ago
[-] Are you kidding me? You are not being "press ganged", when you try to play music the music player shipped with the OS is opened.
reply▲selectnull31 minutes ago
[-] Apple Music can not be uninstalled. That's pretty much "press ganged" in my book.
reply▲awakeasleep32 minutes ago
[-] your point would carry more weight were it possible to switch the default music player
reply▲for me it's when I open an audio file and it automatically launches it AND adds it to my music library, the adding to library is what I hate, then I have to delete it and specifically choose "Keep file"
reply▲Ah a long time ago when the Music app was still called iTunes I have configured all music files to be opened with quicktime player. It’s been so long that I forgot the default was the Music app. To me it’s absolutely clear that playing a file doesn’t mean I want it in my library.
reply▲lachlan_gray1 hour ago
[-] Yes, so many times I've been jumpscared by work-related audio in my playlists because of this
reply▲This was annoying to me too but it is pretty easy to fix. Just right click on the .mp3 or whatever file, Get Info and change the default application to your preferred app and then click on "Change all..."
You have to do it once per file type but it's once and done.
reply▲Yes, at least in theory changing this is straight forward. Though:
>You have to do it once per file type but it's once and done.
I will note I have one Mac with one old user account where it will not remember this anymore across reboots (across macOS 15, plan to skip 26 and hope 27 is acceptable). I haven't had time to try to get into why, but it's occasionally irritating.
reply▲Thank you, this is a huge pet peeve of mine. I mis-click my airpod and suddenly this app I've never used and don't want launches
reply▲> this app I've never used and don't want launches
I'm by no way an Apple fan, but why not uninstall the app if you don't need it?
reply▲jacobsenscott2 hours ago
[-] It cannot be uninstalled
reply▲^ How can you make such an obviously wrong statement?
Drag Music app to Trash, and that it! Like you do with any other app.
reply▲FloayYerBoat1 hour ago
[-] I hope this is a joke. You cannot delete it. It's considered "system" software.
reply▲lynndotpy49 minutes ago
[-] You can not do this on MacOS, at least on MacOS 26 on Apple Silicon without SIP disabled. I was:
- Unable to drag from the Applications drawer to Trash
- Unable to drag from the Spotlight search to Trash
- Unable to drag from Finder (in ~/Applications) to Trash
- Unable to delete (in Finder)
- Unable to delete (through rm in terminal).
This has been a bother for years across MacOS versions and I've tried variations of these, personally.
In the future, you might consider not denigrating others in this way. It is hard to save face when you are wrong. And it is hard for others to provide an avenue for you to save face while also pointing out that your statements are not true.
reply▲As a non power of Mac (only recently switched), I'll definitely try this.
My repeated attempts to remove from Dock and hide it all failed: half the time I remove my ear buds the Apple Music pops up in the middle of my screen and auto-enables itself in the Dock...
reply▲The Dock just contains a bunch of shortcuts. The app itself lives in the /Applications folder along with the rest of them that you can choose to add to your dock (by just dragging them down there and letting a spot open up for it).
reply▲parl_match50 minutes ago
[-] ^ How can you make such an obviously wrong statement
Go ahead and try. It's not like "any other app".
reply▲The (shitty) logic here is that you don’t ‘own’ the OS, but merely rent it, so “deal with it”
reply▲parl_match50 minutes ago
[-] You can disable the control that prevents deleting the app (SIP).
reply▲cough cough hey EU you hearing this shit?
reply▲If you for whatever reason do not want the security benefits offered by SIP, you can turn it off.
Of course, doing so just to get rid of Apple Music would tend to be a bit crazy.
reply▲I'd say having to turn off System Integrity Protection as a prerequisite to uninstalling a music player is crazy. Spoken as someone who likes MacOS and Apple Music.
reply▲lynndotpy46 minutes ago
[-] The Apple Music thing bothers me and adds friction to my life every single day that I use MacOS.
We're on a tech forum where everyone here is aware (or at least can understand) how SIP is useful for the security model on MacOS. But for plenty of people with this problem, SIP is only the thing you learn can disable so you can immediately make your life a little better.
The crazy ones are Apple here, since this problem should not require disabling SIP to fix.
reply▲Same! And there is no obvious close button etc on the overtop blocking modal dialog either. It’s a dark pattern.
reply▲I needed something like this a few months ago. I use my MacBook to run my (musical) keyboard rig for live performances, and use low-latency wireless headphones for monitoring. The headphones have a transmitter dongle that plugs into my laptop, and the dongle sends a "play/pause" command if I press a button on my headphones...causing Music to launch and begin playing audio out of my default output device. It doesn't even care whether my headphone transmitter is selected as the default output device; in a complex multi-device setup, I can press a button on my headphones and it will happily play audio out of
some other device.
This is problematic because if I were to accidentally hit the button in the middle of a set, and it decides to default to whatever interface is connected to the P.A. system, then now I've just started blasting some random song at full volume to everyone in the venue.
(It's not an immediate problem for me anymore because I've reworked my hardware setup such that the dongle connects through my audio interface rather than directly to my laptop, meaning my laptop no longer receives "play/pause" commands from it. There were additional reasons for this rework, but preventing this misbehavior was absolutely part of the consideration.)
It's absurd that a premium device marketed to creative professionals has unconfigurable behavior like this which is so unacceptable for a live show.
reply▲gausswho30 minutes ago
[-] After I discovered my Mac Mini was downloading animated wallpapers until filling up 80Gb of space, then doing it all over again every time I reboot, I decided I'd had enough and installed LuLu firewall and blocked every outbound to apple.com. I don't use any of their services anyway, and some of them approach malware suspicion (keyboard input analytics daemon??)
reply▲I encourage you to look into Little Snitch.
reply▲Terretta21 minutes ago
[-] On the plus side in MacOS 27, once it
is playing, dragging the playhead makes it grumpy and to fix it you get to quit or go
full screen:
- Media Playback Known Issues: In apps like TV, Podcasts, and Music, the window controls may become unresponsive after dragging the playhead to adjust the playback position. (177984877)
- Workaround: Use keyboard shortcuts or the menu bar to close, minimize, or enter full screen mode.
• • •
Super clunky compared to the imminently more practical workaround for wrong-size gifs in Messages, STOP LOOKING AT IT:
- Messages Known Issues: GIFs and pasted images might render as the incorrect size. (177657977)
- Workaround: Scroll until that message is offscreen
reply▲I tried to stop this a while ago and searching the internet did not yield great results, so I ended up creating a Shortcut that runs when the Music app opens to close it again. This actually worked well until that time I wanted to use the Music app for real.
So annoying and not great UX from Apple imo. Thanks for this.
reply▲Every time I get in my car the Apple Music app prompts me to resubscribe with a full screen popup. Usually it tries 2-3 times before it stops.
reply▲I use both Apple Music and Spotify, and normally use the former in the car because it resumes its state from the last shutdown while Spotify does not. But when I do use Spotify, Apple Music is the app that comes up the next time I start the car. Pretty annoying.
reply▲microflash19 minutes ago
[-] Since I don't care about Apple Music at all, I just lock the ~Music/Music folder. It prevents the app to launch while still keeping the key functional in other apps.
reply▲Cider998644 minutes ago
[-] reply▲This comment is almost at the quality of "install gentoo" but it lacks the panache and vintage that 4chan has.
reply▲Reading this title made “The Miracle of Joey Ramone” by U2 play in my head.
reply▲Joey Ramone never wrote a song about U2.
+1 point for Joey Ramone.
reply▲Oh man, throwback to when they forced the U2 albums on to everyone’s device for ReasonsTM
reply▲It's not even a throwback. That U2 album
still shows up if I accidentally open Apple Music. I haaaaate it. I disliked U2 before any of this, but now I have absolutely sworn to never ever listen to any of their music.
Google did the same thing with Transformers 2 I think. It still shows up as Purchased for me even though I absolutely did not purchase that. Good way to ensure I never ever watch any Transformers movie!
reply▲al_borland57 minutes ago
[-] There was a website to remove it completely from your library, it launched in 2014 and was up for many years, but is now gone.
These days you can delete the album from your library and set the Music app to not automatically download your purchases. If you want to go an extra mile, you can login to your iTunes account to view your purchases and hide it there too.
reply▲Sharing as I’ve not seen this mentioned by anyone. I have achieved something similar with Karabiner and the custom reassignment of the play button to actually run Spotify and play the last song from there rather than Apple Music and it worked like a charm.
reply▲From TFA, via StackExchange:
launchctl unload -w /System/Library/LaunchAgents/com.apple.rcd.plist
will quit the process responsible for the madness (rcd, the "remote control daemon").
You'll have to remember to re-load this thing if you want the default behavior. Or if you encounter other unexpected situations, to restore the default insanity.
It might be easier to run this app instead; then you have an icon in your GUI desktop environment and an app you can simply quit to restore defaults. Plus this app allows you to assign any app to the "Play" media event.
reply▲Wow, thank you! I use and "like" youtube music, but it seems like every time I'd start a google meet call (IIRC) or otherwise interact with audio on my MacBook it would bring up Apple Music. If I quit it, it would pop back up the next time I had audio playing, but if I just left it running it would be fine. So I'd always have this Apple Music in my list of running apps. Kind of annoying.
I ran the above and then quit Apple Music and tried a few different things and so far it hasn't come back up.
reply▲>
you have an icon ... simply quitFTA:
Uh.. how do I quit this app?
The app has no Dock icon and no menubar icon so to quit it you'd need to do one of the following:
Launch Activity Monitor, find Music Decoy and press the button at the top
Run the following command in the Terminal:
killall 'Music Decoy'
reply▲I THOUGHT I WAS THE ONLY ONE!
I actually nuked my music library off my Mac to mitigate this problem, but it's still a nuisance when the app launches.
Thank you for sharing this!
reply▲This is nice, I recently vibe coded my own media player as I mostly listen to my own digitalized audio library and all software available today sucks to cover my scenario or consumes way too much resources by my taste… but random triggering Apple Music happens so often and it’s so annoying. Good article explaining how the trick works, should be easy to self-implement without installing another 3rd party software from nowhere known source
reply▲Dev here, thanks!
Although it's a pretty well known source in the macOS apps community (lowtechguys.com) with source code available right on the front page (https://github.com/FuzzyIdeas/MusicDecoy) and the code does basically nothing. There's not much to be afraid of.
reply▲Would also love to stop the dictionary app from opening
reply▲Also the ability to uninstall bloatware like Chess. When I switched my browser away from Chrome I kept typing "c, h, return" in spotlight out of habit and kept opening Chess.
reply▲This is great! We need something similar for knowledgeconstructiond and several other overly insistent Apple software components.
reply▲I had been using the app noTunes for this.
reply▲I deleted mine because of this problem
I have the podcast app and so many times I would click an AirPod to resume and it would play a random song
reply▲I still use itunes for music that I've purchased. But all the features now push you towards streaming and its exhausting.
reply▲PSA: Its Unix.
sudo chmod -x /Applications/Music.app
reply▲I wish it were that simple.
~: sudo chmod -x /Applications/Music.app
chmod: /Applications/Music.app: No such file or directory
~: sudo chmod -x /System/Applications/Music.app
chmod: Unable to change file mode on /System/Applications/Music.app: Operation not permitted
(Mac OS Tahoe 26.5)
reply▲ % ls -la /System/Applications/Music.app/Contents/MacOS/Music
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 66201040 Apr 30 09:12 /System/Applications/Music.app/Contents/MacOS/Music
reply▲PSA: don't run random commands people on the internet tell you to run, it turns out those people haven't even run those commands themselves..
reply▲Lovely. I don't press the play button by mistake much, but if i touch my BT headphones wrong...
reply▲I actually had to look at my keyboard as I'd forgotten there even was a play button.
reply▲My mac opens Music for func + enter. Sometimes I accidentally have the function button held down as I hit enter. Then whatever app I’m trying to use to type loses its focus to this app I never use.
reply▲reply▲It seems I need to leave this running for it to work? So it's not just a configuration changes.
reply▲forsalebypwner2 hours ago
[-] When you first launch it, you'll notice a pop-up saying that this will automatically run when you login. There's no dock icon or menu bar icon. So no configuration changes needed.
reply▲Interesting, there's always been a menu bar icon for it for me. You can hide it, though.
reply▲I'm using "Music Decoy" and I don't see one. Possible noTunes has one.
reply▲echelon_musk2 hours ago
[-] Same. noTunes works perfectly. There's no need to reinvent the wheel.
reply▲dangerlibrary2 hours ago
[-] noTunes is one of the first things I install on a new mac.
reply▲fartfeatures2 hours ago
[-] I'm very clumsy and I've never hit the play button by accident. What are you guys doing that makes it so easy to accidentally click the play button? Are you using the mac with the touch bar or something?
reply▲forsalebypwner2 hours ago
[-] For me, this constantly happens:
- I'll pause a podcast I'm listening to on my iPhone or iPad, or just take my AirPods out of my ear for a moment
- Like 5 minutes later, I'll squeeze the AirPod stem to resume playback. It will instead think that I want to play Apple Music on my Mac for some fucking reason.
I don't think this behavior can be easily customized (somebody let me know if it can!)
reply▲hombre_fatal2 hours ago
[-] Just this week I was stuck in this state where my AirPods were receiving audio from the iPhone in my pocket (intended), but play/pause commands from the AirPods were sent to my Macbook in the other room.
reply▲I had to start using noTunes years ago because whenever I accidentally touched or removed my (Sony / non-Apple) bluetooth headphones, iTunes/Music would pop up without fail. Apparently they sent a "play" button press, so the application would pop up. Because it's a system application, you cannot delete it, there's no way to override the key, there's no way to disable it. So noTunes has been running for 7 years straight on my Mac.
reply▲I use play/pause to start/stop the music on whatever I was listening to music on (Spotify usually, sometimes brain.fm). It's a background action, play music or stop music, no change to flow.
If Spotify isn't running for whatever reason, or sometimes even if it is, Apple Music decides that what I actually want is for it to steal focus for 5 seconds while it loads, switch to a full screen window and pester me to subscribe.
So in my case, the button click is intentional but the response isn't.
reply▲For me it's my AirPods launching the Music app, something I rarely want. At the same time, it's one click in the menu bar to disable noTunes in the rare circumstances I want to use the Music app.
It's made worse by the fact that I use my AirPods across my personal devices and my work Mac, the latter of which I have to switch them to manually (since my work Mac is not on my personal iCloud account).
Anyway, however it happens, I often found the Music app launching on my personal and work Macs, and noTunes prevents it.
reply▲creedleshrump2 hours ago
[-] For me it mostly happens when I press play on my airpods. If they connect to my mac instead of my phone it opens up apple music if I don't have another media player open.
reply▲abhinavsns9 minutes ago
[-] There is another app called notunes that I have been using for ages.
reply▲launching apple music on play, seems very similar to microsoft's early anti trust case and internet explorer
reply▲partloyaldemon24 minutes ago
[-] Ok. Now help me get spotlight to index my mirror-style Google Drive. Seems only this level of genius could accomplish it.
reply▲For the life of me, I cannot figure out why this is the default behavior for a supposedly premium operating system.
reply▲Because Apple's view seems to be that if you aren't using all of Apple's products, you're not their target audience.
reply▲It seems the fans are willing to put up with absolutely unlimited grief and inconvenience to drink the koolaid they're given. Some Apple PM made a edict 11 years ago that Music shalt be thine only audio experience on the platform. Lock it down, boys!
The rest of us ask for a customizable experience.
reply▲the_gastropod1 hour ago
[-] This “Apple customers are brainwashed cultists incapable of examining reality” schtick was tired a decade ago. No option’s perfect. But Apple’s current tradeoffs vs other options’ trade offs continue to feel worthwhile to many.
reply▲The OS isn't supposed to be premium since it's free, does that help figure it out?
reply▲You can't buy the OS directly, but it certainly isn't free.
reply▲I wish there was a way to stop it from ever appearing as spotlight result - when I type ‘music’, the first result (always) should be the music app I use, not their stuff
reply▲Recently I've been using a mac more, and--even with the low bar of Windows default search--I've been very disappointed with Spotlight.
For example, it keeps polluting my results with things like preinstalled system music demo files. There's no option to exclude the location, nor to selectively disable "Garageband" results while keeping other apps I actually do use for work.
reply▲The lack of applications like this is why macOS will always be a superior alternative to Linux.
/s for the sarcasm impaired
reply▲innagadadavida2 hours ago
[-] The same thing happens with iPhone and car bluetooth. It is super annyoing and many times, a podcast will be playing in the background while the car has FM/radio selected. This is incredibly frustrating and bad user experience. The worst part is it is not clear if this is Apple's fault or some buggy old firmware in the car's audio stack that is at fault (this happens consistently on 2017 Tesla Model S).
reply▲I too have seen conflicts between CarPlay and the radio. My car's a Hyundai.
I mostly listen to the radio, with an occasional trip where I instead listen to a podcast or music via CarPlay.
What I've found greatly helps is when I finish a trip where I've used CarPlay after I park but before turning the car off I open my phone, open control center, tap the now playing widget, tap the symbol on that for output selection, and make sure it is set to iPhone Speaker. I then hit the Media button in the car and select FM. That starts the radio playing. Then I stop the radio and shut off the car.
Next time I use the car CarPlay connects normally but does NOT take over the media playback. If I hit the play button in the car it starts playing the radio.
This works fine for me because as I said I mostly listen to radio. It is not that big of a deal the once a week or so that I listen via CarPlay to do those extra steps at the end of a trip.
It would probably be a lot more annoying if I was frequently switching between radio and CarPlay.
In either case I would definitely like a setting somewhere that makes it so the play button in the car plays whatever source was playing the last time you turned off playback.
reply▲brew install notunes
Another fix for this bollocks
reply▲Just uninstall it! Mac is simple if you know how to use it!
reply▲tobadzistsini1 hour ago
[-] Or just switch to an Android phone.
reply▲I have an Android phone. It’s really not a replacement for a Macbook Pro though.
reply▲This software doesn't work on an Android phone.
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