Friday 13 April 2012

C* Music Player





Features Plugins Input: Ogg Vorbis, MP3, FLAC, Musepack, WavPack, WAV, AAC, MP4, and everything supported by ffmpeg (WMA, APE, MKA, TTA, SHN, ...) and libmodplug Output: PulseAudio, ALSA, OSS, RoarAudio, libao, aRts, Sun, and WaveOut (Windows) Playing Gapless playback ReplayGain support MP3 and Ogg streaming (SHOUTcast/Icecast) Play queue Optional playback resume on startup Interface Instant startup, even with thousands of tracks Powerful playlist filters / live filtering Easy to use directory browser Customizable colors Dynamic keybindings.

You can bind a key to any command, :seek +1m for example Vi / less style search mode Vi style command mode with tab completion Misc Excellent compilations handling Uses Unicode internally for all string handling Supports audio scrobbling (to e.g.

Last.fm or Libre.fm)etc. via status display programs Can run external commands for the currently selected files (tag-editor for example) Can be controlled via UNIX socket using cmus-remote command Known to work on Linux, OS X, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and Cygwin Documentation Installation In case your favourite package manager provides an up to date version of cmus (see list of cmus packages), installation is straightforward, e.g.: Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install cmus OS X: brew install cmus Otherwise, please consider compiling from source — it is not hard at all.

Usage cmus comes with a great reference manual.

If you have it installed, try man cmus-tutorial, man cmus and man cmus-remote.

Audacious





Use the plugins included with Audacious to fetch lyrics for your music, to set an alarm in the morning, and more.

You can also request a new feature or report a bug here, but remember that the developers of Audacious are volunteers and can only spend a limited amount of time on the project.

Audacious 3.2.1 releasedFebruary 17, 2012 It's our first bugfix release in 3.2.x

Read more Audacious 3.2 releasedJanuary 20, 2012 New version brings music library feature, MPRIS 2 support, performance improvements, and more.

releasedJanuary 04, 2012 This point release in the 3.1 branch fixes a few bugs.

Coming in 3.2: music library pluginDecember 17, 2011 
Integrated in the GTK interface in Audacious 3.2 will be a plugin that allows indexing an entire collection or "library" of music.

AlsaPlayer





pcm audio player for Linux and other similar systems Released version: 0.99.81

GIT version: latest Take a look at AlsaPlayer on sourceforge : Song of the week: Lyrics:John Lennon, Working Class Hero Title: John Lennon, Working Class Hero Support AlsaPlayer development with hardware / cash?

About AlsaPlayer AlsaPlayer is a new type of PCM player.

It is heavily multi-threaded and tries to excercise the ALSA library and driver quite a bit.

It has some very interesting features unique to Linux/Unix players.
The goal is to create a fully pluggable framework for playback of all sorts of media with the focus on PCM audio data.

The core code was written by Andy Lo-A-Foe with contributions from many other folks.

See the credits files for details.

The name AlsaPlayer might be confusing a bit today since we now support a whole bunch of different output systems.

The old default OSS audio interface is supported, as well as Esound, NAS (Network Audio Server), Sparc and SGI audio outputs.

the most interesting new output is JACK.
JACK is different from other audio server efforts in that it has been designed from the ground up to be suitable for professional audio work.

This means that it focuses on two key areas: synchronous execution of all clients, and low latency operation.

We believe that this interface will become the preferred one.

JACK uses ALSA for interfacing with the audio hardware.

If you came here looking for ALSA DRIVERS visit http://www.alsa-project.org and come back once you have them up and running :-) Erik de Castro Lopo joined AlsaPlayer Erik de Castro Lopo joined the AlsaPlayer team.
He is also called mega-nerd and is the main author and developper of libsndfile.

He also have a nice website at mega-nerd.com.

He allready begun to make hugue changes in the internals of alsaplayer.

So, the next release will be a big step forward with a lot of improvments and bugfixes.

We also decided to shift from svn to git.

The new code repository is located at alsaplayer on github.

News (Updated November 7, 2010) November 7 2010 AlsaPlayer-0.99.81 is out, This is a bug fix release.
A big thanks to all that send fixes to me, without you, the AlsaPlayer will not be living.

See the ChangeLog for the details and the names of the contributors.

I will also stress you to contribute to the AlsaPlayer.

At least 2 things need to be fixed.

The first one is the jack output plugin that is using deprecated functions.

The second one is the resampling.

For that, libsamplerate will give a better quality.
Enjoy the AlsaPlayer !

November 3 2007 I am proud to announce that AlsaPlayer-0.99.80 got stable, thanks to the hard work of every one that contributed to the GTK2 interface and other functions as well that by submitting/fixing bugs.

This release is a bug fixes release.

See the ChanLog for the details.

October 10 2007 AlsaPlayer 0.99.80-rc4 is out.

This is a bug fixes and feature improvement release.

JW Player




JW Player The JW Player is handy and flexible flash video player.

It supports playback of any format the Adobe Flash Player can handle (FLV, H.264, MP4, MP3, AAC, JPG, PNG and GIF).

It also supports various streaming and playlist formats (including RMTP, HTTP, live streaming and more), a wide range of flashvar settings and an extensive JavaScript API.

Features: Change the JW Player’s look & feel to match your site.
Design your own or check out JW Player’s custom skin library.

The JW Player works out-of-the-box with Wowza’s token system so you can keep grubby mitts off your videos.

Good Plugins System — With plugins, your player can do anything.

You can build your own with the Developer SDK and resources or browse our Plugins to pick up Analytics, Viral, Adtonomy, Rate It, and much more.
Hassle-free video management How to install: This guide will tell you how to Install the JW Player for Flash v5.

First, Download the installation ZIP from web, which contains everything you need to get started.

STEP 1: Upload Player Files to Website — Transfer the player.swf,

Tuesday 10 April 2012

Video LightBox



Video LightBox Video LightBox JS is a free wizard program that helps you easily embed video to website, web page or blog, in a few clicks without writing a single line of code.

Video LightBox is FREE for non-commercial use.

A license fee is required for use on a commercial website.

Video LightBox Business Edition additionally provides an option to remove the VideoLightBox.com

credit line as well as a feature to put your own watermark to videos.


Features: Embed flv, mp4, 3gp video files Add Youtube, Facebook, Google Video, Metacafe, Vimeo, MySpace videos Mac & Windows versions XHTML compliant Automatic thumbnail creation Adding caption A lot of gorgeous gallery themes Built-in FTP How to install: There is a detailed installation guide provided by Video LightBox team on their website.

Flowplayer





Flowplayer is a video player for the World Wide Web.


Using Flowplayer, You can build your own looking player and place it on your site to stream your video from a global network.

Features: It’s totally free and open source You can build your player in minutes Smooth as silk — It’s optimized to oprate the overall behaviour of the player to “hide” curvy edges and blocking behaviour.


Timeline animates fluently and there are two different autohiding modes: ”fade” and ”slide”.

Stream from anywhere — Use industry standard streaming protocols RTMP or HTTP with most common web servers lighttpd, Apache, nginx or IIS or stream your videos from well known Content delivery networks Akamai, Amazon Cloudfront, Highwinds, HDDN, SimpleCDN and more Extend with web starndards — Flowplayer is build with Flash technology which ensures that 98% of all Internet users can see your videos.

Winamp



Winamp is a media player for Windows-based PCs and Android devices, written by Nullsoft, now a subsidiary of AOL.

Winamp supports music playback using MP3, MIDI, MOD, MPEG-1 audio layers 1 and 2, AAC, M4A, FLAC, WAV and WMA.

Winamp supports playback of Windows Media Video and Nullsoft Streaming Video.

At installation, Winamp scans the user's system for media files to add to the Media Library database.

Winamp has extendable support for portable media players and Mass Storage Compliant devices, Microsoft PlaysForSure and ActiveSync, and syncs unprotected music to the iPod.


Winamp Media Monitor allows web-based browsing and bookmarking music blog websites and automatically offering for streaming or downloading all MP3 files there.

Winamp Remote allows remote playback (streaming) of unprotected media files on the user's PC via the Internet.

The Winamp software development kit (SDK) allows software developers to create seven different types of plug-ins.

Plug-in development support increased Winamp's flexibility for, for example, a plethora of specialized plug-ins for game console music files such as NSF, USF, GBS, GSF, SID, VGM, SPC, PSF and PSF2.


Winamp published documentation on skin creation in 1998 with the release of Winamp 2, and invited Winamp users to publish skins on Winamp.com.

The ability to use skins contributed to Winamp's popularity early in MP3 development.

Winamp 5 supports two types of skins — "classic" skins designed to Winamp 2 specifications (static collections of bitmap images), and more flexible, freeform "modern" skins per the Winamp 3 specification.

Frankel formally founded Nullsoft Inc. in January 1998 and continued development of Winamp, which changed from freeware to $10 shareware.


Version 1.90, released March 31, 1998 was the first release as a general-purpose audio player, and documented on the Winamp website as supporting plugins, of which it included two input plugins (MOD and MP3) and a visualization plugin.

Winamp 2.10, released March 24, 1999 included a new version of the "Llama" demo.mp3

Nullsoft relaunched the Winamp-specific winamp.com in December 1999 to provide easier access to skins, plug-ins, streaming audio, song downloads, forums and developer resources.

The next major Winamp version, Winamp3 (so spelled to include mp3 in the name and to mark its separation from the Winamp 2 codebase), was released on August 9, 2002.


Winamp3 had no backward compatibility with Winamp 2 skins and plugins, and the SHOUTcast sourcing plugin was not supported.

In response to users reverting to Winamp 2, Nullsoft continued the development of Winamp 2 to versions 2.9 and 2.91 in 2003, even alluding to it humorously.

The Winamp 2 and Winamp3 branches were later fused into Winamp 5. Nullsoft joked that "nobody wants to see a Winamp 4 skin" ('4 skin' being a pun on foreskin).

Winamp 5 was based on the Winamp 2 codebase, with several Winamp3 features (e.g.

Winamp 5.5: The 10th Anniversary Edition was released on October 10, 2007, ten years after the first release of Winamp (a beta preview had been released on September 10, 2007).


Released as a beta product in October 2010, the Android version for OS 2.1 includes syncing with Winamp desktop (ver.

Its focus is on syncing the Winamp Library to Winamp for Android and the iTunes Music Library (hence the name, "Winamp Sync for Mac").

The developer's blog states that the Winamp Sync for Mac Beta will pave the way for future Winamp-related development under Mac OS X. Winamp has proved so popular that there have quite a few Linux music programs which function in a similar way and can also use Winamp WSZ skins so that in effect one has a player that looks like Winamp.

One example is an image of Justin Frankel, one of Winamp's original authors, hidden in Winamp's About dialog box.

Media Center (software application)





Media Center, or formally, "JRiver Media Center" is a multimedia application that allows the user to play and organize various types of media on a computer running Windows.

Media Center is a "jukebox"-style media player, like iTunes, which usually uses most of the screen to display a potentially very large library of files.

Media Center organizes files using Media Libraries, these are effective databases.

Version 12 of Media Center added support for auto-importing of media, whereby Media Center continually watches designated directories for changes in media.

If a new file is dropped into the directory, Media Center will add the file to its library.
View Schemes are the main way to browse through files in Media Center.

Media Center allows the creation of playlists.

If a new album were added to Media Center's library that had the Indie Rock genre tag, Media Center would automatically add those files to the smartlist.

Media Center provides four different user interfaces for use in different situations.

Standard View is the default user interface for looking at the Media Center Library on a desktop/laptop computer.
The standard view consists of the following components: While the standard and mini views are designed to be used in front of a desk computer, or laptop, Media Center also features a large font remotely accessible 'Theater View'.

With this, Media Center uses 3D and 2D Animation to create a more visually appealing interface, which more nearly resembles that of a digital recording box, or DVD player.

Media Center provides network access to its libraries using different server plugins.

Media Center uses COM Support to provide access to an SDK library.

Media Center's predecessor was named Media Jukebox, until the rebranding to Media Center for version 9.


In November 2007, J. River released Media Jukebox 12, a stripped down version of Media Center 12, which is available to download for free, compared to Media Center's price of $49.98.

K-Multimedia Player



K-Multimedia Player (commonly known as The KMPlayer, KMPlayer or KMP) is a media player software for Microsoft Windows which can play a large number of formats including VCD, DVD, AVI, MKV, Ogg, OGM, 3GP, MPEG-1/2/4, WMV, RealMedia, FLV and QuickTime.

Internal filters are not registered into the system's registry to prevent the operating system from confusing system filters with K-Multimedia Player's filters The player can set many audio and video effects, slow down or increase playback speed, select parts of a video as favorites, do various A-B repeats, remap the keys of remote interface for HTPC including overlay screen controls, and change a skin dynamically depending on a media type playing.

On 5 March 2008, The KMPlayer's Forum announced that the KMPlayer had been acquired by Pandora TV (a Korean streaming video company) in August 2007.


The About page refers to it as "The KMPlayer Professional Media Player" and "The KMPlayer".

The license page says: The player is distributed on international download sites under the names "The KMPlayer" and "KMPlayer".

George.J, writing for Tech Support Alert, noted "KMPlayer definitely stands out" concluding "KMPlayer works like a charm and my experience with the player has been excellent.

Mihai Matei, writing for FileCluster, noted "Overall this media player is very promising and manages to deliver a high-quality experience to the user" concluding "KMPlayer is a great media player.

Media Player Classic



Media Player Classic (MPC) is a compact media player for 32-bit and 64-bit Microsoft Windows.

Media Player Classic is capable of VCD, SVCD, and DVD playback without installation of additional software or codecs.

Media Player Classic is primarily based on the DirectShow architecture and therefore automatically uses installed DirectShow decoding filters.

Media Player Classic supports native playback of OGM and Matroska container formats.

The version known as Media Player Classic 6.4.9.1 was meant for fixing bugs and updating outdated libraries; its branch's development is mostly inactive.


he other version, called Media Player Classic - Home Cinema (MPC-HC), is meant for adding new features, as well as fixing bugs and updating libraries.

MPC-HC updates the original player and adds many useful functionalities including the option to remove tearing, additional video decoders (in particular H.264, VC-1 and MPEG-2 with DirectX Video Acceleration support), Enhanced Video Renderer support, and multiple bug fixes.

There is also a 64 bit-version of Media Player Classic Home Cinema that supports Windows XP x64, Windows Vista x64, and Windows 7 x64.

Windows Media Encoder



Windows Media Encoder is a freely downloadable media encoder developed by Microsoft which enables content developers to convert or capture both live and prerecorded audio, video, and computer screen images to Windows Media formats for live and on-demand delivery.

The latest version, Windows Media Encoder 9 Series, can encode video using Windows Media Video version 7, 8 or 9. Audio encoding uses a number of Windows Media Audio version 9.2 or version 10 (if the version 10 codecs are installed) profiles and a Windows Media Audio 9 Voice speech codec.

Windows Media Encoder 9 Series enables two-pass encoding to optimize quality for on-demand (streamed or download-and-play) content.


Bundled with the program are the applications Windows Media File Editor, Windows Media Profile Editor, and Windows Media Stream Editor.

Windows Media Encoder Studio Edition was a separate planned version of Windows Media Encoder 9 Series with support for segment encoding and multiple audio channels.

Windows Media Player





Windows Media Player (abbreviated WMP) is a media player and media library application developed by Microsoft that is used for playing audio, video and viewing images on personal computers running the Microsoft Windows operating system, as well as on Pocket PC and Windows Mobile-based devices.

In addition to being a media player, Windows Media Player includes the ability to rip music from and copy music to compact discs, burn recordable discs in Audio CD format or as data discs with playlists such as an MP3 CD, synchronize content with a digital audio player (MP3 player) or other mobile devices, and enable users to purchase or rent music from a number of online music stores.

Windows Media Player replaced an earlier application called Media Player, adding features beyond simple video or audio playback.


The default file formats are Windows Media Video (WMV), Windows Media Audio (WMA), and Advanced Systems Format (ASF), and its own XML based playlist format called Windows Playlist (WPL).

Windows Media Player 12 is the most recent version of Windows Media Player.

All versions branded Windows Media Player (instead of simply Media Player) support DirectShow codecs.

Beginning with Windows Vista, Windows Media Player supports the Media Foundation framework besides DirectShow; as such it plays certain types of media using Media Foundation as well as some types of media using DirectShow.


Windows Media Player supports playback of audio, video and pictures, along with fast forward, reverse, file markers (if present) and variable playback speed (seek & time compression/dilation introduced in WMP 9 Series).

Windows Media Player supports full media management, via the integrated media library introduced first in version 7, which offers cataloguing and searching of media and viewing media metadata.

Media can be arranged according to album, artist, genre, date et al.. Windows Media Player 9 Series introduced Quick Access Panel to browse and navigate the entire library through a menu.

However, the feature was removed in Windows Media Player 12. Since WMP 9 Series, the player features dynamically updated Auto Playlists based on criteria.


Pre-populated auto playlists are included in Windows Media Player 9 Series.

"Musical Colors" was removed starting with version 9, but is retained if Windows Media Player was upgraded from version 7 or 8. Version 11 and above refrains from having the former "Ambience", "Particle", "Plenoptic", and "Spikes" visualizations.

On Windows XP and above with WMP 9 Series and later, the Windows Media Audio Professional codec is included which supports multichannel audio at up to 24-bit 192 kHz resolution.

Windows Media Player 11 includes the Windows Media Format 11 runtime which adds low bitrate support (below 128 kbit/s for WMA Pro), support for ripping music to WMA Pro 10 and updates the original WMA to version 9.2.


MP3 playback support was built-in beginning with version 6.1 and audio CD playback was natively supported with version 7. DVD playback features minus the necessary decoders were integrated into Windows Media Player 8 for Windows XP.

MPEG-2 and Dolby Digital (AC-3) decoders were included beginning with Windows Media Player 11 on Windows Vista (Home Premium and Ultimate editions only).

Windows Media Player 12 adds native support for H.264 and MPEG-4 Part 2 video formats, AAC audio and 3GP, MP4 and MOV container formats.

Windows Media Player features integrated Audio CD-burning support since version 7 as well as data CD burning support since Windows Media Player 9 Series on Windows XP and later.

VLC media player





VLC media player (also known as VLC) is a highly portable free and open-source media player and streaming media server written by the VideoLAN project.

VLC media player supports many audio and video compression methods and file formats, including DVD-video, video CD and streaming protocols.

VLC used to stand for VideoLAN Client, but since VLC is no longer simply a client, that initialism no longer applies.

VLC was the client for the VideoLAN project, with VLC standing for VideoLan Client.

After 13 years of development, version 1.0.0 of VLC media player was released on July 7, 2009.


The version 2.0.0. of VLC media player was released on February 18, 2012 VLC is third in the sourceforge.net

In VLC, interfaces are modules, which means that VLC's core can launch one, many, or no interfaces.

Because VLC is a packet-based media player, it can play the video content of some damaged, incomplete, or unfinished videos.

VLC supports all audio and video formats and all file formats supported by libavcodec and libavformat.

This means that VLC can play back H.264 or MPEG-4 video as well as support FLV or MXF file formats "out of the box" using FFmpeg's libraries.


VLC media player has some filters that can distort, rotate, split, deinterlace, mirror videos, create display walls, or add a logo overlay.

VLC media player can play high definition recordings of D-VHS tapes duplicated to a computer using .

VLC media player can display the playing video as the desktop wallpaper, like Windows DreamScene, by using DirectX, only available on Windows operating systems.

Several APIs can connect to VLC and use its functionality: On Windows, Linux, Mac, and some other Unix-like platforms, VLC provides an NPAPI plugin, which enables users to view QuickTime, Windows Media, MP3, and Ogg files embedded in websites without using additional products.


Starting with version 0.8.2, VLC also provides an ActiveX plugin, which lets people view QuickTime (MOV), Windows Media, MP3, and Ogg files embedded in websites when using Internet Explorer.

VLC can read several formats, depending on the operating system VLC is running on.

As of December, 2011, the VLC team states that a version of VLC for Android "is in development".

The VLC media player software installers for the Mac OS X platform and the Windows platform include the libdvdcss DVD decryption library, even though this library may be legally restricted in certain jurisdictions.