MySQL helps remembering across all clients what movies you've seen, where did you left a movie if didn't finish watching (stop it in the living room and continue in another room), etc. But it's soundly beaten by a local copy of all art, on an SSD. There is no contest.
A scroll speed comparison MC to XBMC is a bit difficult since each program employs different tricks (MC stores certain 'art' in 3 different resolutions, XBMC may fall back to not showing art to keep the scroll smooth).
Since our focus over here is probably MC (hehe), I have 3 comments:
- max scrolling an album view in Audio (all art stored on SSD) it's so fast it becomes a blur (plus it doesn't look like your navigating, the selection highlight remains frozen in the middle of the screen, while the rest of the imagery becomes a moving haze of all possible coverarts). Maybe something can be further tweak here? As it scroll MC does some fading for top row / bottom row. At supreme speeds this cuts heavily into the visible area.
- the behavior of the existing art for anything not album covers is rather fixed (AFAIK). As an example, the speed the background fades in and out should be much faster or customizable (I can jump in an out of a series even before the background changes; fading should be quick, half a second, not 3-5 seconds like it looks now).
- there is so much more art out there that MC doesn't use yet. As a list from the top of my head as inspiration if any more thought is given to further art implementation, it's like this (if you don't what one looks like visit
http://fanart.tv/)
Movie:
Poster
Fanart
Extrathumbs
TV:
Series Poster: Poster, Landscape, Banner
Series All Seasons Poster: Poster, Landscape
Series Fanart
Season Poster: Poster, Landscape
Season Fanart
Clearart
ClearLogo
CharaterArt
Music:
ClearLogo
CDArt
Artist Background
Album Covers