https://www.svp-team.com/wiki/Main_Page
Smooth video project, comes with mpc-hc + madvr + other blackmagic to enjoy high quality animu at 60fps & superior quality.
You'll be able to laugh at streaming plebs in no time.
Also https://www.clementine-player.org/ because it's good.
Yes. That's how free software works.
A good example from my own home computer is the Amarok music player. I used to like it, but they stuffed so many features it became unusable for me. Then someone else took an older version of Amarok, from the time it worked well without so much clutter, modernized it and released it under the name Clementine.
Today I use Clementine alone, and love it. Sorry, Amarok guys, you fucked up.
For those of you on Linux systems (who can't install iTunes), or those of you who dont wish to install iTunes, you can easily access and subscribe to this podcast using an open-source player such as <em>Clementine</em>.
Steps:
In Clementine, choose the Internet Tab on the left hand panel.
Right-click on Podcasts and click "Add Podcast". In the new window, select "Search iTunes store" option and then enter "Berniecast" in the search field.
Highlight the podcast and hit "Subscribe". You can then manually or automatically download all episodes for future listening.
Hope this helps out a few people!
Edit: There's something called an "OPML" file..sorta of an exported URL that one can import into an RSS feed program. Perhaps if /u/ryanleesipes could release that, it would make it easier for folks to add it without depending on iTunes?
Other linux players, like tomahawk and clementine, can use the spotify shared object to access your library. Don't know if it works for paying users only.
I use Clementine which is a fork from Amarok 1.4.
https://www.clementine-player.org/
Remote control using an Android device, a Wii Remote, MPRIS or the command-line.
Copy music to your iPod, iPhone, MTP or mass-storage USB player
Search and play songs you've uploaded to Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive
Don't know about Google Play tho and think not?
.
> An official app / program for desktop. The web app works great but I dislike having yet another tab open.
I'd rather have a proper 3rd party API, that would allow your library to be integrated in your favorite player (Clementine) and many other cool things.
Currently, Clementine. Let's sort by top artists this month:
Well, now you know how old I am. :)
I've got quite a bit of music I guess. My music player of choice is Clementine, which I started using after I saw it mentioned here on the Plounge I believe. It's pretty full featured and I don't find myself wanting anything. ...oh there's a Rainbow Dash visualiser in it, incidentally.
So that's how I listen to stuff that I've already got in my library. For other stuff I often generally just listen to it on youtube or where ever it's hosted. There's some stuff I'll come back to again and again but isn't in my library because there's no download and/or I'm a cheapskate.
My family do have a large collection of CDs, but none of them are really mine, as it were. I think they've still got some vinyls somewhere, but they are old, so figures.
As for my hardware. I've got a rather old set of speakers with subwoofer that I hardly ever use. 99.99% of the time I'm using my headphones, which are wireless but the signal is digital so there's basically no loss in quality. They're fairly high quality headphones too, as one might expect considering they cost >£100.
OpenSuse with KDE? Best integrates music players are probably amarok or clementine...but there is for sure no shortage of audio players for linux.
You might not actually need an Antivirus if you know safe internet practices, Windows Defender (Microsofts built in AV) is much better than it used to be, but you take some precautions against Cryptolocker type viruses (I recommend CryptoPrevent for this, and yes the URL seems shady but it is legit).
If you really want a separate AV, Kaspersky is still very good, but it costs money. Avira's free AV is still good AFAIK, but has corner "pop-ups" when it updates definitions.
AFAIK Itunes is still terrible on windows compared to other software which can do the same thing. I still run an old version of winamp, but I've heard good things about Clementine for podcasts and stuff.
If you are used to using the terminal in OSX and homebrew, you might want to check out Powershell in windows, and install Chocolatey.
Clementine has support for iphones. https://www.clementine-player.org/ I'm not sure if that is what you are looking for but I've used it for years and have been happy with it.
If we're talking gui music players, Lollypop is my favourite; and Clementine follows as a close second.
But Rhythmbox is pretty good.
Simple et bon c'est difficile, mais un bon compromis c'est Clémentine.
Après si t'as pas peur de tâter la ligne de commande, le truc ultime c'est beets mais forcément c'est moins facile d'utilisation.
Clementine has lots of visualization options. It was my go-to for a while until I sought out more minimalist options. Now I happily use cmus.
I use Clementine. Pretty simple, search for the podcast, add it to your list, it'll scan and show all the episodes, then you can download all or individually. The one quirk, and I don't think it's Clementine's fault, is sometimes it'll scan the podcast and show 2 of episodes you have downloaded already - one downloaded, one new. I think it's just because the creator uploads a new version, maybe with a new preface or ad or something, and Clementine sees it as a unique/new episode. Minor issue, still super simple. Organization is a podcast folder then episode date and title of each. I'm pretty sure you can customize that.
I don't know if there's a way to automate and have it grab all new episodes every day or not. I don't listen to a ton, so I just scan every week or so and grab everything that's new.
Maybe not exactly how you imagine it but this works well:
- Get a desktop player that checks all your boxes. I like clementine for example but shop around.
- Use Syncthing to just sync your music folder to your phone
- Use a mobile player that checks all your boxes. Feg Vanilla music.
When set up, as soon as both devices are connected to wifi, it will sync your music to your phone.
Oh well yeah. I absolutely refuse to install iTunes on my Win 10 gaming PC. I use my Mac and get stuff (not much since I rip my own vinyl) from the Music Store and transfer it to the PC on the home network. On the PC, I use Clementine 1.3.1.
Thanks. I use Clementine for playing music and it has a wide range of visualizers. Maybe it uses this library?
Edit: it literally says "Visualisations from projectM." on its home page.
Ok well youre running a mac mini I figured you'd be more comfortable with a Mac Program... also Apple does actually have an Itunes remote app, they've had it for years.
On my windows PC I run AIMP, and use the AIMP remote control App on my Android Phone, or I can use the web interface... Kodi is really meant as a jack of all trades so it's larger out of necessity, you should look for a strictly music playing Mac Application that includes a remote control option.
I've never tried it but there is a program for Mac called Clementine Music Player (they even have a Pi version) and there is an Android based remote control as well.
minimal downloader: Juice
medium downloader/player: Clementine
and then to mention the bloated desktop version of Itunes
I enjoy Clementine on linux. they have a windows client. i imagine the functionality would be the same.
No matter what app you settle on, you should back up your music collection if you value it! I'm sorry you had to have some files wrecked to learn this lesson. Data corruption isn't a question of if, it's when. Be prepared.
Having said all that...
Clementine is iTunes-esque. https://www.clementine-player.org
Dunno about all the mixer stuff, but you can try the Clementine music player, it automatically fades between tracks and you can customize playlists and shuffle and whatnot.
Most of the rest sounds like you're looking for a soundboard app, kind of like this https://www.ambrosiasw.com/utilities/soundboard-mac/ but I've never used one of those. Also dunno if they would allow you to mix something, save it, and play it on another player.
I use Clementine, a cross-platform fork of Amarok 1.4. It can hide in the tray by default and supports customizable global keyboard combos for play, pause, stop, previous song, next song and more.
Ich benutze seitdem ich privat zu Linux gewechselt bin Clementine. Gibt's auch für Win und Mac. Da habe ich aber keine Erfahrungen mit. Der ist auf jeden Fall schön übersichtlich.
Pretty much vanilla. I like Foobar a lot for the customization. But usually end up using Clementine because of all of the the readily available internet streams. Clementine
Clementine music player Hands down the best music player I've ever used.
Supports network streaming, library organisation, tabbed playlists, lyrics, randomize artist/album, remove duplicates from playlists and a whole lot of other small features that makes it awesome to use. Also comes with an app so that you can control it from your smarthphone, which is awesome even if the app could use some more features.
White noise. I nod off to live streams, music, movies, audio books, the TNG warp core, and my music player of choice (https://www.clementine-player.org/) has a menu item that plays a loop of rain with music, or by itself if you don't play any songs with it.
I also have a home lab in the closet that's got lots of fans I can just hear with the door shut.
Meditation can be of use as well.
Easy mode meditation:
what to do | count |
---|---|
Fill lungs via nose in | 4 |
Hold | 7 |
exhale fully via mouth over | 8 |
You're too busy counting and tracking if you actually filled/emptied your lungs and working on the air volume matching the time allotted to let your mind wonder. Helps to close your eyes so the room and all the crap in it ceases to exist. If that's not good enough and you need more input, use clean white noise like rain, a fan, background airplane noise, etc. Don't use anything with words that might catch your brain's fancy.
Take a look at Clementine. It's multiplatform, supports lots of online radio stations and services, has audio converter, tag editor and can upload your music to iPod or other device. Also it has hypnotoad.
While on desktop, I use Clementine to do all my Spotify (and local, and other services) music playing - to me, Spotify is really just a great catalog with an API.
Wish there was something better than the official client on Android, though.
On whatever drug I listen to "Echoes of Bluemars" via the built-in Icecast support in Clementine Player. Totally beatless ambient music :-) Bluemars' additional "Cryosleep" playlist is even better, so damn slow and spheric, like traveling through outer space. Good for dissociatives.
JRiver may be able to do it:
> Playlist Sync -- Use MC's options for Handhelds (aka Portables) to set your choices. You can select your own playlists, or you can select categories like "All Audio". Once you have it set, choose Sync in the Action Window.
> MC can convert on-the-fly when it syncs. See the options for the device.
However, that same page has warnings about compatibility issues with certain iPods and iPhones.
I wouldn't be surprised if Clementine Player could do it. I know it supports syncing and transcoding.
Do yourself a favor and go open source, you'll be much happier you did if you ever want to change again. Here are some popular ones:
https://www.clementine-player.org/
http://banshee.fm/
http://getnightingale.com/
I prefer nightingale but the other 2 are very popular and stable projects. And since they're FOSS there's no harm in trying out what you like.
Clementine is quite nice. It's cross-platform and easy to use. It allows you to easily edit tags, and you can transcode tracks with it for copying stuff to devices. I really like the two pane spreadsheet like interface, although some people don't.
I really have a wide range of musical tastes ranging from classical to metal (sans rap, country and most jazz)
But for a long time Classical / Baroque would get me through times of needing to concentrate, but as of late, I've been on a SOMA FM kick through the Clementine media player. Both SOMA FM and Clementine are well worth checking out for a variety of music.
Soma FM lately - Def Con 21, Lush and Groove Salad. www.somafm.com
https://www.clementine-player.org/ (has 100s of preloaded internet streams and can link up with Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, Spotify and other cloud or subscription services. Very cool player for all musical tastes.
Clementine once they manage to have a release for M1 arch. Pine PLayer, Swinsian. Won't they work through the rosetta emulator though?
Banshee is pretty good and simple, https://www.banshee-project.org/
And Clementine is good if you use Qt or don't mind using Qt apps. https://www.clementine-player.org/ and it has a remote app for Android.
I'm not sure about your playlists, but I've been using windows' clementine. You can save playlists manually, or just start playing an album from the library menu. Probably can't play as many file formats as VLC, but it's nice as a sorter, for things like random songs.
​
I voted Amazon Music before realising it doesn't let you upload MP3s anymore... I'll still probably still use Amazon Music to buy albums going forward though.
But unless they fix things like google home integration, ability to play songs offline with the phone screen off and remove those ads (for the music I purchased) I'm not going to use YTM.
If they didn't fix the above by the time the GPM is killed I'll switch to Cloud Player + Clemetine Player and have my music on dropbox or gdrive.
It would be easier to use a music player app that supports windows and Linux. Clementine is nice and has a windows version.
https://www.clementine-player.org
The answer to your question is maybe?
https://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=version&iId=33888
Kind of niche, but I can download all episodes through the Clementine podcast function. (Cementine is an open-source audio player)
But yeah, other people in comments already have better solutions.
VLC can play it fine. If you're looking for more of something that manages an audio library like iTunes there's Clementine which is a cross-platform open source app.
I've used Clementine in the past. You can probably find a couple of other media players like that that also allow you to link to your airsonic library. https://www.clementine-player.org/ Clementine Music Player
I use Clementine https://www.clementine-player.org/en It has all features you want and many more and it's available for Linux, Windows and MacOS. You could even upload your data to the cloud and stream it from there or control the music playing on your PC with your Android Smartphone.
Personally, I just play files through VLC or CMUS, depending on what computer I use. I don't see the need for any of these programs.
Clementine. Ugly as a troll but has some nifty tools, is small and light and plays everything I can throw at it.
Works in Mojave, but don't forget in the System Preferences in the Security & Privacy pane, to give it access to control the computer.
Here, try this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_iPod_file_managers
There are a number of options for Mac but personally I use Clementine (on Linux, but there is a Mac version) and find it works very well with iPod Touch.
Could anyone tell me why, on High Sierra, a brand new set of Soundpeats BT headphones will not work with Clemetine (open source audio player) on a 2010 MP, but *will* work from Firefox, using a web player for the same stream (somafm.com)? It's truly annoying. Thank you.
My partner uses Clementine to connect to my airsonic server on his work Windows machine. The biggest downside is that playlists from the server aren't available, nor are playlists you make on Clementine sync-able. It also presents the library as artists read from id3 tags, not folder structure - annoying to me. But it is at least a fully featured music player, is playlist-focused, and is possible to easily make a gigantic random playlist, so mixed feels.
You've used iTunes for 15 years- software that most people consider absolute cancer. You may want to just try something else and see what you've been missing out on.
Free country and all.. https://www.clementine-player.org/downloads
With linux you could look at something like https://pi-hole.net/ if you wanted to use it as an adblocker for your network.
You could also use it as a webserver, or a music playing computer if you hook it up to speakers. There are tons of examples like https://www.clementine-player.org/
Clementine player can access the cloud to play music. Some may be radios, some may be your own cloud. It isn't the same as spotify but it may suit you.
Also, their privacy policy is an example of what all policies should look like.
Clementine has a Pi version, so you could give that a try.
Most of the Pi Music distributions (Volumio, Moode Audio, Rune Audio, Max2Play, Pi MusicBox) use either MPD or MoPiDy.
I use MusicBee on my windows machinebut on my Mac when I need to I use Clementine (https://www.clementine-player.org/)
It's decent enough, makes playlists, etc. For copying playlists to your phone, make the playlist and drop the files + playlist file onto your phone and then use whatever android music player to play said playlists.
Kind of annoying, but at least you're not using ButtTunes.
Well, Clementine: https://www.clementine-player.org/
is able to generate various playlists: Completely random, least played, most played, newly added, never played, recently played and dynamic mix, whatever that means and some more. And it can automatically extend that playlist.
Check it out, it's in the official repositories/Software Center.
Id define music playback;
Just locally hosted files
Locally hosted + internet streaming services
Depending on which of the two your friend falls into would say which path is recommended.
Obviously this group will be recommending Linux for it's capabilities and security in terms of updates and functionality.
Edit: and Clementine
I have a large collection of CD's ripped to WAV and FLAC. They all work out of the box with Clementine.
In the few cases where I FUBARd the metadata, Clementine did everything I needed get the metadata back in order. Honestly there are more tags than needed too. There's Date Added, Date Modified, Ratings, Last Played, Last Skipped, Bit Rate, Score, Comment, Mood, etc.
There's no coverwall or anything fancy but it's the only player outside of foobar that looks exactly like I want it too. Until you get into ricing and you start using mpd+ncmpcpp. That shit is crack.
I don't use playlists, but those features are there.
The streaming services are there too, but disabled by default.
When you look at the pictures you'll notice the ugly side bar. You can move that so that it displays the buttons as tabs on the top of the Library.
I would rather use a program instead of a online service. I assume that you are using Windows, right? I can't test it myself (Linux user) but a friend praised http://www.xmedia-recode.de/download.html as simple and powerful converter.
Personally I use the Clementine Music Player which also has a relative powerful and simple converter function.
Hope that helps.
I use a couple audio file players for different things -:
Clementine is full featured with a built-in searchable library, multiple online sources etc. I use this as a music library controller.
Audacious is nice and simple, drag a file to it and it plays. Muliple playlist support but not much else. I use this for quickly playing single audio files, testing downloads before adding to library, etc.
Both are available for multiple Linuxes and Windows.
Their github repo has been created six years ago, but yeah it's still under development. I don't really know why it's not as well known, I guess it's since it's not all shiny and new, and there are many music players out there.
While I'm at it, here are two other players: Clementine, which was inspired by an old version of Amarok
Depends on your definition of looks great I suppose. I use to use Clementine before I jumped on the streaming (Spotify) bandwagon and thought it worked great. Maybe a touch boring visually but nothing bad enough to make me open my editor ;)
Ah, I guess I misunderstood what the app did. Check out Clementine, seems to have the features of MediaMonkey, but has a Linux version.
As for dual booting, I try to avoid it for that exact reason. If you don't put your heart into Linux and finding the Linux versions of what you want, you'll go back to Windows since that's what you already know - it's human nature.
I listen to podcasts on Debian/SteamOS with the (open source) Clementine music player (https://www.clementine-player.org/). It interfaces with the Apple web directory out of the box and has just worked for me, better than anything else I've tried.
The time commitment to dig to worthwhile places anywhere beyond pure entertainment in podcasts is one problem (I'm 50+ hours into Joe Rogan's podcast and have only scratched a little into it's total surface). Listening multiple times is probably the only way to really pick up the information too.
Clementine https://www.clementine-player.org or the classic VLC http://www.videolan.org/index.html (It was created to play video I know, but it works well with audio). these are free payment options. But there are several even designed for the audiophile like http://jplay.eu
For the music thing, with Spotify you can choose playlists to download onto your phone, and tell it not to use data. (just wanted to clear that up c: ) An alternative that might do what you want is Clementine.
> 3 There is any REAL alternative to foobar?
Try Clementine. It is not everything-is-customizable like Foobar, but a lot of similarity in the UI generally.
Or cmus if you want to endlessly tinker and tweak.
Hearthstone works just fine in WINE. Not sure about WoW but it should work too.
I use Clemetine as my music player (you can also try it out on Windows!) and it has native last.fm support.
Tried Clementine?
It works as a stand-alone player even with badly tagged files - just drop your files into the playlist instead of adding a library for it to scan.
I'm not exactly sure, but you should check out Clementine. It's a great piece of software that's focused on showing you your entire music library, and organizes it nicely.
It allows you to select multiple tracks, and it analyzes them and tags them accordingly, usually very well. You get a prompt after it analyzes them so you can make sure they're correct, and formatted to your liking.
Awesome features: Displays lyrics and song / artist information from a number of sites, of which you can customize. Changes the background of the main program to the album art of the currently playing track. Streaming support. Ability to customize not only what columns are displayed, but their justifications, too. A bunch of other neato things...
Tips: I hate notifications in general, and they're enabled by default. Select your lyrics providers in the options, and if you listen to rock or metal, put darklyrics at the top.
If you just want a program that will batch rename and add tags, that automatically analyses like Clementine does, try Tag&Rename. It's a bit clunky, and you have to reinstall it every month I believe (free trial version) but it's very powerful.
> What is this? Is it a replacement ?
Sort of. I consider it an all in one audio replacement since it handles iHeartRadio and my podcasts as well(and it is supported natively in linux).
Check it out, really cool project, they aren't even accepting donations at the moment, just word of mouth, which I think is pretty cool.
I like Banshee I was bouncing between Banshee and Clementine for a while and Celemtine's inability to reliably sync to an iPod I got as a gift a year back was the major deciding factor. I would recommend Clementine for someone who wants cool features with a bit of bugginess while Banshee is a bit less feature-rich but more stable. Both can handle a lot of codecs.
All in .flac and local on a 128GB class 10 sdcard. I just copy over the albums to my music folder which is structured by artist and with subfolders for albums. I just edit in the tags by hand if they are empty.
Maybe Mp3tag is what you're looking for? I've used Clementine in the past for editing tags on music files as well.
I use [https://www.clementine-player.org/](Clementine) as my music player.
I have also set the background to grey in the settings, added more fields like times listened, last played, file name, and I also configured it to use the album art of the current song playing.
I'd like to throw Clementine Music Player out there. It's functional, customizable, and full of fun little features like replacing album art with a live stream of cute cat pictures, or streaming Star Trek engine noise alongside your music.
I'm very fond of the Clementine music player's lovely rainstorm feature. Basically it plays a nice shower effect over any music you play, which helps make everything blend in together.
Since I've got some nice ambient/chill/relax sets, this makes it even more effective.
VLC does this pretty easily. If you aren't trying to get the songs on to a mobile device, you could also use a media player that supports FLAC natively. I would suggest Clementine, it is pretty fast, plays most music file types, and has some other nice features that iTunes doesn't.