For almost five months—possibly longer—the Spotify music streaming app has been assaulting users' storage devices with enough data to potentially take years off their expected lifespans. Reports of tens or in some cases hundreds of gigabytes being written in an hour aren't uncommon, and occasionally the recorded amounts are measured in terabytes. The overload happens even when Spotify is idle and isn't storing any songs locally.
The behavior poses an unnecessary burden on users' storage devices, particularly solid state drives, which come with a finite amount of write capacity. Continuously writing hundreds of gigabytes of needless data to a drive every day for months or years on end has the potential to cause an SSD to die years earlier than it otherwise would. And yet, Spotify apps for Windows, Mac, and Linux have engaged in this data assault since at least the middle of June, when multiple users reported the problem in the company's official support forum.
https://everynew505.weebly.com/blog/mac-djay-spotify. https://everynew505.weebly.com/blog/put-spotify-app-on-desktop-macbook-air. 'This is a *major* bug that currently affects thousands of users,' Spotify user Paul Miller told Ars. 'If for example, Castrol Oil lowered your engine's life expectancy by five to 10 years, I imagine most users would want to know, and that fact *should* be reported on.'
Three Ars reporters who ran Spotify on Macs and PCs had no trouble reproducing the problem reported, not only in the above-mentioned Spotify forum but also on Reddit, Hacker News, and elsewhere. Typically, the app wrote from 5 to 10 GB of data in less than an hour on Ars reporters' machines, even when the app was idle. Download spotify profile picture. Leaving Spotify running for periods longer than a day resulted in amounts as high as 700 GB.
Advertisement - I have been using Spotify on different phones and I never encountered any problems. However, Spotify simply won't start anymore - I expect after an automatic update. When I try to start Spotify, it shows the interface for a second or so before it then decides to crash immediately. Really frustrating because I cannot use Spotify at all.
- Spotify is not working on iOS, according to thousands of users. When attempting to open the Spotify app on an iPhone, it immediately crashes. The problem is not resolved by deleting the app.
- 2014-05-03 05:59 PM. This is on th shop (older) MacBook. Mac 10.6.8 Intel 2ghz. I came into work today as normal. The Spotify client login window was open. Cleared out co-workers credentials and plugged mine in, (non-premium). It appeared to do the normal looking start up of the client.
- MacRumors attracts a broad audience of both consumers and professionals interested in the latest technologies and products. We also boast an active community focused on purchasing decisions and technical aspects of the iPhone, iPod, iPad, and Mac platforms.
https://everynew505.weebly.com/everybodys-free-to-wear-sunscreen-spotify.html. Change the Spotify settings. Open Spotify on your Mac and then follow these steps to stop the window from opening on startup. 1) Select Spotify Preferences from the menu bar. 2) The Spotify settings will open within the app window.
Spotify officials hadn't responded to Ars' questions more than two days after they were sent. According to comments left in the Spotify forum in the past 24 hours, the bug has been fixed in version 1.0.42, which is in the process of being rolled out. The update remains unavailable to many users, this reporter included. And that means Spotify's drive-assaulting behavior continues unabated for many.
According to posts in the Spotify forum (see pages here and here, for instance), the massive data writes are tied to one or more database files with titles that include the string Mercury.db. Users have proposed several manual techniques that are supposed to correct or mitigate the problem, but the most preferable solution is for Spotify developers to fix this bug and to make the update available to all users immediately. The performance of millions of storage drives may count on it.
Update: After this story was published, a Spotify spokesperson told Ars:
Spotify Immediately Closes Mac Os
We've seen some questions in our community around the amount of written data using the Spotify client on desktop. These have been reviewed and any potential concerns have now been addressed in version 1.0.42, currently rolling out to all users.
Spotify Closes Immediately
The update still is not available for either of the Mac or Windows machines this reporter uses. Spotify officials said version 1.0.42 will be available to all users within the next few days. Once the update is available, the Spotify will install it automatically the next time users start the app. If Spotify remains open throughout, users will receive a blue banner asking them to restart the client to install the latest update.