What does the security model for opening the files look like? If you specify a directory chooser the app can span the directory tree and open/parse all files readable to the user? Any idea if it will walk symbolic links? I'm a bit surprised there isn't more of a user warning from the browser.<p>Nice proof of concept though! Very impressive what can be done. Worked well in stable channel + openSUSE.
Worked well in Chrome 10 on Windows 7 for the first few minutes then crashed. Adding files was a little bit slow but the audio playback and tagging worked well. Nicely done though, it's very cool!
I'm quite curious about the file reading code. With a simple directory browse from the user couldn't you start to walk the file tree and read whatever you liked? Nothing I see to stop something like this then firing off Ajax calls to send up everything it finds. I think some digging through the code is in order.
This is so awesome.<p>Having tried numerous audio players for OSX I just can't find something that I'm satisfied with. I guess I'll just start building my own now :)
the core:<p><pre><code> <input type="file" webkitdirectory directory multiple mozdirectory onchange="getSongs(this.files)">
</code></pre>
There is a security issue on windows, try type `shell:cache` in the directory browsing dialog.
Not talking about this specifically, but the model:<p>If an app only deals with local data, does it need to be a web app?, except that thereby it becomes zero-install, zero-update, global and cross-platform.<p>Could or is ChromeOS going to play local mp3s before? It's not much of an OS if it can only play mp3s on a server somewhere, with a browser plugin. Will Spotify and other streaming clients work on it? Is it cloud data only?
Chrome 10: Succes (although I can only select a folder)<p>Firefox 3.6: fail<p>Chromium 10: loads, fails to play<p>Opera: loads site with errors, clicking button doesn't do anything
Well, it doesn't read ID3 tags, but if you just drag your music folder into Firefox, you can browse around and play MP3, Vorbis etc. files. It also works with videos.