Amarok is a sound system-independent audio-player for Unix. Its interface uses a powerful "browser" metaphor that allows you to create playlists that make the most of your music collection.
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In this version, the newly added StreamBrowser makes
finding Web radio streams as simple as using a TV. This
version can now also display the currently playing title
and the bitrate of a stream. Additional new features
include improved performance with very long playlists,
and the reworked user interface with a fresh look.
This major release adds Undo and Redo commands to the
playlist, sorting facilities to the file browser, and DCOP
support for controlling the application. The crossfading
effect was extended and the improved analyser has a
new visualization. Colors and fonts became configurable,
the playlist filtering got much faster, and there was a lot
of polishing and bugfixing.
This is a snapshot of the current development
version, providing a preview of the features in
the next major version. A lot of bugs have been
fixed in this release, so users are encouraged to
try it. New features include crossfading (allowing
gapless playing of continuous albums), a greatly
enhanced playlist with several columns of
information, and a system tray icon with a menu.
Meta-info access has become significantly faster
by switching to the new, well-optimized TagLib.
Drag-and-drop has been improved and debugged.
This major update comes with many new features, as well as bugfixes
and usability enhancements. Added features include complete network
transparency, a commandline interface, support for configurable
plugins, and enhanced drag-and-drop. amaroK also has a new look with
nicer graphics, and support for keyboard shortcuts.