Eliot Rosewater wrote: » Cant you use Amarok in GNOME if you have the KDE libraries installed?
evercloserunion wrote: » I never understood the hype around VLC? it annoys me that playing 10 songs in VLC opens up 10 windows (or can that be changed)? I understand that it's very lightweight but is it as lightweight as command line mplayer?
bnt wrote: » I like RhythmBox for music, but I like to listen to podcasts in high-speed mode, so VLC is good for that. I wish RhythmBox were a bit better at handling files e.g. if I have a bunch of files in a single directory, that's an album, regardless of what the ID3 tags say.
jackrussell007 wrote: » ohh dont get me started...i friggin hate that. I'd love if music players were more sensitive to the folder structure rather than just scanning your music folder and categorising them itself. I hate scrolling for ages through orphaned tracks until I find the album I want. I use amarok on ubuntu9.1, not sure which version of amarok that makes it. to defeat the above problem I find I most often use the file browser in amarok rather than the collection browser.
JuneBug29 wrote: » Seen Guayadeque mentioned and i would like to recommend it.
Khannie wrote: » Gonna check it out. Cheers. Looks a lot like rhythmbox on initial inspection.
evercloserunion wrote: » Anyone know how to get Rhythmbox to display the window when you run it, as opposed to just open in the systray so you have to click the icon and explicitly tell it to show the window?
Ruu wrote: » I've been using Audacious.
mathie wrote: » Anyone know a good one that connects to Creative Zen players?
Eliot Rosewater wrote: » There's a command line program for controlling Rythymbox called rhythmbox-client. Now they don't have an option to show the window, but just doing `rhythmbox-client` without any options seems to have that effect. So I edited my menu option for Rhythmbox (under Sound & Video) from `rhythmbox %U` to `rhythmbox-client %U` and that seemed to do the trick. I hope it works for you! I think rhythmbox-client is great. I've a few keyboard shortcuts set up using it, so that Ctrl+Alt+> goes to the next song or Ctrl+Alt+p plays/pauses.