

The good news is that you’re not short on choice.

There’s no immediate need to purge or panic as the outdated Spotify Snap still works on Ubuntu (though admittedly “works fine” is subjective with this app, and I say that as someone who uses it daily).īut if you’re the sort of Linux user who likes to run the latest software on your system you might want to look in to an alternative way of getting Spotify for Linux - at least until some sort of consistent released cadence is revived for the Snap build. Jamie Bennett, VP of Engineering, Devices & IoT at Canonical heralded the arrival of the Spotify Snap in late 2017 by stating that: “Spotify has ensured that their users in the Linux ecosystem are now able to enjoy the latest version of their leading music streaming application as soon as it’s released.”Īlas, it’s not quite turned out that way. Now, to be fair, Spotify has done a pretty stellar job of maintaining its Snap app since 2017 - it’s only 3 months out of date.īut as the chart below shows, the Snap build is slacking compared to other formats:-Īnyone who uses the Spotify desktop client enough will know how badly any and all bug fixes are needed! The client, to put it mildly, is a fudge (although it’s not “officially” supported on Linux anyway, despite providing official packages). “Oh,” I thought, “I guess there hasn’t been an update to the Spotify Linux desktop client since then!”īut there has - several updates, in fact!
SPOTIFY DEDUPLICATOR NOT WORKING INSTALL
Hurrah for an easier way to install the music streaming client (no need to futz around adding the Spotify repository like in the past) and hurrah for automatic background updates that ensure I’m always running the latest release.Īlas, the official Spotify for Linux Snap package has not been updated since April of this year. I’ll be honest: when Spotify arrived on the Snap store I thought: “hurrah”. Shortly after publishing this post Spotify updated their Snap packages to the very latest builds - result!
