Skip to main content

Clementine – Attractive cross platform music player based on Amarok 1.4

Amarok 1.4 was arguably one of the best music players produced during recent years. Then sometime around 2008, the Amarok team decided to migrate the code base to Qt4 and so came a new Amarok 2. The 1.4x series was abandoned and no longer supported. 

Amarok 2 was written from scratch and was essentially a new software. However, it was not well received by many users because it had less features than what was present in version 1.4. Although Amarok has improved with each new releases some users still consider Amarok 1.4 to be the best release of Amarok ever.

clementine

This is where Clementine drops in. This multiplatform, attractive music player is inspired by Amarok 1.4. It comes with all the major features that were included in Amarok 1.4x series including searching from the library, radio stations, integration with last fm, batch tagging of media files and so on. Clementine’s best feature is that it runs on all the major operating systems – Windows, Linux and Mac OS.

Here are some of the things I like about Clementine.

  • Adding music to the library is almost instant. The player does not waste time importing music to the files, which most players take ages to complete depending upon how large your collection is. Most music fans have massive collection.
  • Tabbed interface allows you to quickly switch between the library and disk folders view. The radio stations is on another tab.
  • Tabbed playlist lets you organize multiple playlists and keep them on different tabs.
  • There are two different Stop buttons – stop immediately and stop after this track.
  • Cover manager lets you quickly replace covers, load new ones and fetch missing covers from the Internet.
  • Transcode music into MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Ogg Speex, FLAC or AAC on the fly.
  • Pretty desktop notifications and integrates with Growl for Mac.

Whether or not you have used Amarok before, you will like Clementine.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How to Schedule Changes to Your Facebook Page Cover Photo

Facebook’s current layout, the so called Timeline, features a prominent, large cover photo that some people are using in a lot of different creative ways. Timeline is also available for Facebook Pages that people can use to promote their website or business or event. Although you can change the cover photo as often as you like, it’s meant to be static – something which you design and leave it for at least a few weeks or months like a redesigned website. However, there are times when you may want to change the cover photo frequently and periodically to match event dates or some special promotion that you are running or plan to run. So, here is how you can do that.

69 alternatives to the default Facebook profile picture

If you have changed the default Facebook profile picture and uploaded your own, it’s fine. But if not, then why not replace that boring picture of the guy with a wisp of hair sticking out of his head with something different and funny?

How to remove watermark from an image or picture

A watermark is any recognizable text, logo or pattern that appears over an image to identify the owner of the image and generally used to prevent unauthorized reuse of the image. Watermarks are usually transparent and can be difficult to remove. The difficulty or ease of removal depends on the content of the image and the position, color, size etc of the watermark.