MusicPlayerPlus
Navidrome Music Server
MusicPlayerPlus | Navidrome Music Server | |
---|---|---|
7 | 302 | |
67 | 10,043 | |
- | 3.9% | |
5.2 | 9.5 | |
about 1 month ago | 1 day ago | |
Shell | Go | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
MusicPlayerPlus
-
What are the guidelines here?
MusicPlayerPlus 2.0.1 release 3 differs substantially from release 2. I'm proud of the work I've done for this release and wanted to share it with the Arch community. Release 3 consists of 112 commits to 119 files and 23 new files including 3 new commands and 6 new backend scripts most of which are designed to provide increased support for multiple platforms, Arch Linux being one of the two new platforms MusicPlayerPlus is being built, tested, and packaged for. See https://github.com/doctorfree/MusicPlayerPlus/compare/v2.0.1r2...v2.0.1r3 for more detailed information on the changes included in release 3 over release 2.
-
MusicPlayerPlus – A Console and Terminal Music Player for Linux
With MusicPlayerPlus, you can stream and play music through several audio packages integrated and extended from its project. MusicPlayerPlus’s initial interaction is with the Music Player Daemon (MPD).
-
MusicPlayerPlus v2.0.1r2 with Beets, Mopidy, and Navidrome support
Download the latest Debian, Arch, or RPM package format release for your platform.
-
MusicPlayerPlus v2.0.1r1 Released
MusicPlayerPlus is a character-based console and terminal window music player and media management system.
-
MusicPlayerPlus version 1.0.3 release 1 Now Available
Version 1.0.3 release 1 of MusicPlayerPlus is now available at the project release page on github. MusicPlayerPlus release assets include Debian format packages for amd64 and armhf architectures (Ubuntu/etc and Raspberry Pi) and an RPM format package for x86_64 architecture (Fedora/etc).
-
Asciiville 1.3.1r2 - ASCII Art, animations, and command line Utilities for Linux
mpcplus, featureful ncurses based Music Player client
Navidrome Music Server
- How the greatest MP3 player undid itself (2017)
-
When you use a Walkman the memories come back: the people in love with old tech
My primary way to play music is from my self-hosted navidrome[1] server with my collection of albums I've mostly purchased from bandcamp. I can stream it to many different devices at home or on the go.
But sitting next to my bed is a Walkman (actually a $10 Jensen version) with a few of my favorite cassettes in the nightstand drawer. Granted, I listen to raw black metal, so the format fits the music well, but I really enjoy just popping in a cassette and hitting play. When I "metaltate", I listen to full albums and do not want to ever be interrupted or have skipping audio due to bluetooth or anything else. It is a really simple and great experience.
Would I ever take my walkman with me or want to carry around a bunch of tapes on a trip? Of course not! But it does have a time and place that is valuable.
When friends come over, we use either vinyl or my custom built RFID cards. There is more of a ceremony to digging through a physical stack of albums and being forced to listen to the album front to back.
[1] https://www.navidrome.org/
- Navidrome: Self-Hostable Music Server
-
Ask HN: Managing MP3s on Mac/iOS Without Streaming Services
Basically, you run a server on your Mac that scans your music collection and "broadcasts" it to the network (LAN or WAN) via either the venerable UPnP/DLNA[1] family of technologies or the newish Subsonic API[2]. Of course, there are others, like DAAP or AURA, etc..
From there, you need to point a compatible player to said server to play your music on any supported device.
If you want to listen to your music on the go, pairing a Subsonic-compatible server on your Mac and a Subsonic-compatible app on your iPhone is probably the way to go. On the server side, I have only used the original Subsonic[3], which was good, but Navidrome[4] seems to be OK. But be aware that the whole "scene" is super messy and fragmented, with the usual abandoned forks of open source alternatives of everything.
Note that this means opening your local network, which comes with its own complexity.
This r/selfhosted thread[5] should give you an idea.
My use case is slightly different. I only care about streaming to my Denon CEOL mini system, which only supports UPnP/DLNA, so my current setup is:
- All my music is stored on a 2011 Mac Mini,
- I use Kazoo Server[6] (not perfect but reliable) to stream it to my audio system,
- which I control via the HEOS app provided by Denon.
Whatever stack you choose, make sure your files are tagged correctly and consistently.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DLNA
[2] http://www.subsonic.org/pages/api.jsp
[3] http://www.subsonic.org/pages/index.jsp
[4] https://www.navidrome.org/
[5] https://old.reddit.com/r/selfhosted/comments/pz9dpb/lets_mak...
[6] https://docs.linn.co.uk/wiki/index.php/Kazoo_Server_setup_Ma...
-
Navidrome 0.50.1 Bug Fix Release
[Scanner] Fix Windows scanner (#2633). Thanks @caiocotts
-
Navidrome 0.50.0 just released!
EDIT: This version has a bug when running on Windows that breaks your database! I deleted the Windows binary from the download page and will publish a fix very soon. For details see: https://github.com/navidrome/navidrome/issues/2630
-
.NET 8 Standalone 50% Smaller On Linux
Jellyfin is great for movies & shows. As an anecdote, it's not so good for music if you're a collector. I personally use Navidrome for that[0].
Anyway, Sonarr[1] makes use of .NET, too. Very reliable software, in my experience.
[0]: https://github.com/navidrome/navidrome
- Navidrome: Open-Source Software to enjoy your music collection from anywhere
-
How to fix ND playlist after changing folder structure?
I am running ND via the docker container (deluan/navidrome:latest which is 0.49.3 (8b93962f) at the time of this writing) and interact with ND using the web interface.
- Building a digital music collection in 2023
What are some alternatives?
rainbowstream - A smart and nice Twitter client on terminal written in Python.
Airsonic - :satellite: :cloud: :notes:Airsonic, a Free and Open Source community driven media server (fork of Subsonic and Libresonic)
Asciiville - ASCII Art, Animation, and Utilities
Jellyfin - The Free Software Media System
Mopidy - Mopidy is an extensible music server written in Python
airsonic-advanced
asciimatics - A cross platform package to do curses-like operations, plus higher level APIs and widgets to create text UIs and ASCII art animations
Ampache - A web based audio/video streaming application and file manager allowing you to access your music & videos from anywhere, using almost any internet enabled device.
wttr.in - :partly_sunny: The right way to check the weather
gonic - music streaming server / free-software subsonic server API implementation
tmux - tmux source code
koel - 🐦 A personal music streaming server that works.