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Music Applet 2.1.0

Music Applet 2.1.0


Music Applet is a small, simple GNOME panel applet that lets you control Rhythmboxs or Banshees playback from a panel. more>>
Music Applet is a small, simple GNOME panel applet that lets you control Rhythmboxs playback from a panel.
Advantages that this applet has over using the icon Rhythmbox puts in the notification area include:
- One-click access to the main operations needed during playback, without needing to use a context menu.
- Display of the current playing time without requiring a mouse-over.
- Display of the current songs album in the song information.
Music Applet currently supports the following music players:
- Banshee
- Rhythmbox
Music Applet is the successor to Rhythmbox Applet.
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Download (0.41MB)
Added: 2007-02-11 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
997 downloads
iPod Music Liberator 3.5

iPod Music Liberator 3.5


The iPod Music Liberator allows you to copy music from your iPod to any computer. more>>
The iPod Music Liberator allows you to copy music from your iPod to any computer, filling in a missing feature of iTunes. You see, iTunes only allows for a one way transfer of music from your computer to your iPod.
But what if you want to move music to another authorized computer? What if you want to make a backup of your music? What if your computer crashes and you lose all of the music on your computer? What if you buy a new computer and need to move your music? What if ... ? Use the iPod Music Liberator for all of your iPod music copying needs.
Main features:
Organized Copying
- Simply copying music from your iPod to your computer is not enough. The iPod Music Liberator allows you to automatically organize your music into folders labeled by artist and album. The iPod Music Liberator also allows you to place all of your music into one folder. Combined with the powerful searching capabilities detailed below, you can organize your music into folders any way you like.
Intelligent Copying
- Dont waste your time copying songs that are already on your computer. iPod Music Liberators intelligent copying feature allows you to copy only the updated songs from your iPod to your computer. This is crucial for people that do regular backups or want to keep syncronized music collections.
Powerful Searching
- Maybe you only want to copy songs from a specific artist, album, or genre. iPod Music Liberators powerful searching capabilities allows you to search "on-the-fly." This means your search is refined with every key you type just like in iTunes.
- Dont let the searching power end there. You can also simply click on any table header to get an alphabetical or reverse alphabetical listing.
Simple User Interface
- Dont let complex user interfaces get in the way of your productivity. The iPod Music Liberator has a simple user interface to allow easy navigation.
Quick Song Listing
- Why wait for a program to find the songs on your iPod when you could be copying songs? The iPod Music Liberator uses the iPods own internal database to quickly list your songs.
Music Player
- Dont have iTunes installed to play music directly from your iPod? Let the iPod Music Liberator do it for you. Whether youre refreshing your memory about which song you want to copy or playing music for friends, the iPod Music Liberator can directly play your music from your iPod.
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Added: 2005-10-10 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
937 downloads
Time::Format 1.02

Time::Format 1.02


Time::Format is a Perl module for easy-to-use date/time formatting. more>>
Time::Format is a Perl module for easy-to-use date/time formatting.

SYNOPSIS

use Time::Format qw(%time %strftime %manip);

$time{$format}
$time{$format, $unixtime}

print "Today is $time{yyyy/mm/dd}n";
print "Yesterday was $time{yyyy/mm/dd, time-24*60*60}n";
print "The time is $time{hh:mm:ss}n";
print "Another time is $time{H:mm am tz, $another_time}n";
print "Timestamp: $time{yyyymmdd.hhmmss.mmm}n";
%time also accepts Date::Manip strings and DateTime objects:
$dm = Date::Manip::ParseDate(last monday);
print "Last monday was $time{Month d, yyyy, $dm}";
$dt = DateTime->new (....);
print "Heres another date: $time{m/d/yy, $dt}";
It also accepts most ISO-8601 date/time strings:
$t = 2005/10/31T17:11:09; # date separator: / or - or .
$t = 2005-10-31 17.11.09; # in-between separator: T or _ or space
$t = 20051031_171109; # time separator: : or .
$t = 20051031171109; # separators may be omitted
$t = 2005/10/31; # date-only is okay
$t = 17:11:09; # time-only is okay
# But not:
$t = 20051031; # date-only without separators
$t = 171109; # time-only without separators
# ...because those look like epoch time numbers.
%strftime works like POSIXs strftime, if you like those %-formats.
$strftime{$format}
$strftime{$format, $unixtime}
$strftime{$format, $sec,$min,$hour, $mday,$mon,$year, $wday,$yday,$isdst}

print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 0,0,0,12,11,95,2}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 1054866251}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y}n"; # current time
%manip works like Date::Manips UnixDate function.
$manip{$format};
$manip{$format, $when};

print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y}n"; # current time
print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y,last Tuesday}n";
These can also be used as standalone functions:
use Time::Format qw(time_format time_strftime time_manip);

print "Today is ", time_format(yyyy/mm/dd, $some_time), "n";
print "POSIXish: ", time_strftime(%A %B %d, %Y,$some_time), "n";
print "Date::Manip: ", time_manip(%m/%d/%Y,$some_time), "n";

This module creates global pseudovariables which format dates and times, according to formatting codes you pass to them in strings.

The %time formatting codes are designed to be easy to remember and use, and to take up just as many characters as the output time value whenever possible. For example, the four-digit year code is "yyyy", the three-letter month abbreviation is "Mon".

The nice thing about having a variable-like interface instead of function calls is that the values can be used inside of strings (as well as outside of strings in ordinary expressions). Dates are frequently used within strings (log messages, output, data records, etc.), so having the ability to interpolate them directly is handy.

Perl allows arbitrary expressions within curly braces of a hash, even when that hash is being interpolated into a string. This allows you to do computations on the fly while formatting times and inserting them into strings. See the "yesterday" example above.

The format strings are designed with programmers in mind. What do you need most frequently? 4-digit year, month, day, 24-based hour, minute, second -- usually with leading zeroes. These six are the easiest formats to use and remember in Time::Format: yyyy, mm, dd, hh, mm, ss. Variants on these formats follow a simple and consistent formula. This module is for everyone who is weary of trying to remember strftime(3)s arcane codes, or of endlessly writing $t[4]++; $t[5]+=1900 as you manually format times or dates.

Note that mm (and related codes) are used both for months and minutes. This is a feature. %time resolves the ambiguity by examining other nearby formatting codes. If its in the context of a year or a day, "month" is assumed. If in the context of an hour or a second, "minute" is assumed.

The format strings are not meant to encompass every date/time need ever conceived. But how often do you need the day of the year (strftimes %j) or the week number (strftimes %W)?

For capabilities that %time does not provide, %strftime provides an interface to POSIXs strftime, and %manip provides an interface to the Date::Manip modules UnixDate function.

If the companion module Time::Format_XS is also installed, Time::Format will detect and use it. This will result in a significant speed increase for %time and time_format.

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Added: 2007-07-19 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
830 downloads
IFF Format Library 0.1

IFF Format Library 0.1


IFF Format Library provides header structures and utility functions for reading and writing data files in the Interchange Files. more>>
IFF Format Library provides header structures and utility functions for reading and writing data files in the Interchange Files.
The Interchange File Format is a simple structured binary file format consisting of sized and typed chunks of data, selectively readable without having to know the format of each chunk.
This functionality is similar to what XML provides for text documents, and the IFF format can indeed be viewed as a sort of a binary XML. IFFs extensibility is an excellent way of not breaking old applications when the file format changes, making it an excellent choice for your next applications data files.
The IFF is also the simplest and the smallest such data format, ensuring that your files consist of real data rather than overhead and that your code spends more time on real work than on parsing the data file. This library defines the IFF header structures and provides simple algorithms for directly writing many of your objects as chunks and containers.
Installation:
This library can be downloaded from SourceForge, as can its sole prerequisite:
libiff - The library source package.
uSTL - An STL implementation, required.
First, unpack and install uSTL, as described in its documentation. Unpack libiff and run ./configure; make install, which will install the library to /usr/local/lib and headers to /usr/local/include. ./configure --help lists available configuration options, in the usual autoconf fashion. The one thing to be aware of is that by default the library will not be completely conforming to EA85 specification. Why that is so, and why you should take the default options anyway, is discussed in detail in the next section. If you really want to use the original EA85 format, you can to pass --with-bigendian --with-2grain to configure.
Usage:
If you are using C++, chances are you already have an object-oriented design of some kind. You have a collection of objects, related to each other in some way, and you want to write them all to a file in some way. It is, of course, possible to just write them all to the file, one after the other, but that approach makes things difficult if you ever decide to change the structure of those objects, write more or fewer of them, or explain to other people how to read your format. Hence, it is desirable to create some kind of structure in the file, to be able to determine where each objects begins and ends, and what kind of object is where. When using an IFF format, youll make simple objects into chunks, and objects containing other objects into FORMs, LISTs, or CATs.
The first task is to make each of your objects readable and writable through uSTL streams. To do that youll need to define three methods, read, write, and stream_size, and create flow operator overrides with a STD_STREAMABLE macro. Here is a typical example:
#include < iff.h > // iff header includes ustl.h, but doesnt use the namespace.
using namespace ustl; // it is recommended to leave iff:: namespace on.
/// Stores players vital statistics.
class CPlayerStats {
public:
void read (istream& is);
void write (ostream& os) const;
size_t stream_size (void) const;
private:
uint16_t m_HP;
uint16_t m_MaxHP;
uint16_t m_Mana;
uint16_t m_MaxMana;
};
// Since the object is simple, and contains no other objects,
// well make it a simple chunk.
enum { // Define a chunk format for writing this object.
fmt_PlayerStats = IFF_FMT(S,T,A,T)
}; // In a hex editor youll see STAT at the beginning of the object
// making it easy to find when you want to hack something in it.
/// Reads the object from stream p is
void CPlayerStats::read (istream& is)
{
is >> m_HP >> m_MaxHP >> m_Mana >> m_MaxMana;
}
/// Writes the object to stream p os.
void CPlayerStats::write (ostream& os) const
{
os<<less
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Added: 2006-12-07 License: MIT/X Consortium License Price:
1056 downloads
Common Data Format 3.1

Common Data Format 3.1


Common Data Format is a self-describing data abstraction for the storage and manipulation of multidimensional data. more>>
Common Data Format is a self-describing data abstraction for the storage and manipulation of multidimensional data in a platform- and discipline-independent fashion.
It consists of a scientific data management package (known as the "CDF Library") that allows programmers and application developers to manage and manipulate scalar, vector, and multi-dimensional data arrays.
Enhancements:
- Adds new sets of APIs to allow Standard Interface to interact with zVariables and other CDF-related information.
- Adds MingW and FreeBSD ports.
- Adds support for Intel C++ and Fortran for Linux.
- Adds the ability to create legacy CDF 2.7 files.
- Fixes a bug that prevented directories from having .cdf or .skt extensions.
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Added: 2006-03-13 License: Public Domain Price:
1320 downloads
Music daemon 0.0.4

Music daemon 0.0.4


Music daemon(musicd) is a music playing server that supports multiple formats through plugins and multiple playlists. more>>
Music daemon(musicd) is a music playing server that supports multiple formats through plugins and multiple playlists. Musicd supports plugins to enable playing of different audioformats. The plugin-api is quite similiar to one that the popular XMMS uses. Currently XMMS-plugins are not directly supported, but if I find the time, Ill make a meta-plugin to support them.
The first reason to make the player a server is to make it possible to use many different frontends and even at the same time. You can use a GUI if you like them, but anything it can do, can be done from commandline too.
The second reason is to make sure that the GUI or X does not crash the whole player. I have found that many software with a GUI tend to crash. With musicd the player is unaffected by this and you can start the interface again.
Main features:
- Musicd has its own simple text-based protocol for player-frontend communication.
- Support for unlimited number of playlists, songs per playlist and frontends connect at the same time
- Support for both IPv4 and IPv6. Also UNIX-sockets are supported for local connections.
- Currently supported audioformats: mp3 (ffmpeg), ogg vorbis (vorbisfile) and mods (libmikmod).
- Support for OSS and Solaris ouput.
- Musicd has been tested on x86 Linux and Solaris 9.
Enhancements:
- Calling play while already playing shouldnt cause deadlocks anymore
- Load command on a file that has too long line as the last line locked up the daemon, this shouldnt happen anymore
- Invalid id3tags shouldnt give random data anymore
- Invalid filenames shouldnt crash the player anymore
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Added: 2006-08-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1179 downloads
Duplicate Music Matcher 2.3

Duplicate Music Matcher 2.3


Duplicate Music Matcher is a script to quickly find duplicate MP3 files based on letter matching. more>>
Duplicate Music Matcher is a script to quickly find duplicate MP3 files based on letter matching.
Duplicate Music Matcher is helpful for weeding out duplicates that may not be of the same encoding, format, or even the same filename.
Enhancements:
- pymad pyvorbis python-flac deps were all removed in favor of mutagen
- GUI code was updated (no more SimpleGladeApp)
- Delete key have been bound in the GUI
- More accurate matching for ogg and flac files
- The filename column is now resizable
- The GUI play and stop buttons now use audacious.FLAC should now also give a length value
- Some oggs might have a huge bitrate value due to a bug in mutagen.
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Added: 2007-04-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
942 downloads
Top Music 3.0 PR5 Beta1

Top Music 3.0 PR5 Beta1


Top Music allows you to publish music (albums, artists, songs, sound tracks, rankings, etc.) to create an online music portal. more>>
Top Music allows you to publish music (albums, songs, sound tracks, rankings, artists, etc.) to create an online music portal.

It features: A-Z list of bands; band information (name, photo, genre, biography, etc.); discography; album information (title, year, covers, band, etc.); albums songs lists; song information (title, album, number, lyrics, etc.); the ability to listen to tracks; searching; ranking lists (most visited, most voted, etc.); a voting system; an uploads system; themes; an easy configuration screen; many blocks; multi-language support; easy installation; and a support forum, mailing lists, and Sourceforge.net support (CVS, files, etc.)
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Added: 2006-07-11 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1203 downloads
Audio Format Converter 0.7.0

Audio Format Converter 0.7.0


Audio Format Converter is a an Amarok script that allows you to convert the audio format of the tracks in the playlist. more>>
Audio Format Converter is a an Amarok script that allows you to convert the audio format of the tracks in the playlist. The script takes a snapshot of the current playlist. Once the conversion has started, you can go back to using amaroK normally.

Supported files for both input and output include .flac, .ogg, .mp3, .mpc, .m4a, and .wav. Additionally, .wma, .ra, and are supported for input. (See below for the required packages.)

I dont know how to do anything with metatags from .wma or .ra. All I know is tags will get transferred to the output file if and only if the tags show up in the amaroK playlist. If they arent there, I suggest converting the files, then using a real tag editor like Easy Tag to put them in to the converted files.

This has only been tested on amaroK 1.2.4, but it should work on any amaroK>=1.2

The original files are NOT deleted. If the output file will overwrite an existing file, a dialog will appear to ask you whether to go ahead and overwrite or to skip the track. If you try to convert a file into the format its already in, a dialog will ask you how to handle this situation.

Depending on the number of tracks and the speed of your computer, this can take a long time to run. With each track, a passive popup will let you know what track its processing. At any time, you can stop the script by clicking stop in the amaroK script GUI.

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Added: 2007-04-30 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
914 downloads
Random Music 1.1

Random Music 1.1


Random Music plays random MP3 tracks from your music collection. more>>
Random Music plays random MP3 tracks from your music collection. It maintains a flat database of tracks, detailed genres, and weights, and generates a weighted random playlist from the user-selected genres.
The ID3 and ID3v2 fields (title/artist/album), detailed genre, and weight (0-9) for the currently-playing track can be edited, and tracks can be removed from the playlist.
For example, a user can select only tracks with a minimum weight of 5 from the subgenres "Pop - 1970s" and "R&B - 1970s", and the playlist will adjust accordingly.
Enhancements:
- This release adds features to the playlist editor.
- Playlist entries now include the album name, and selected tracks can be moved up or down.
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Added: 2005-10-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1464 downloads
Yahoo::Music::Ratings 2.00

Yahoo::Music::Ratings 2.00


Yahoo::Music::Ratings is a method for retrieving a Yahoo! Music members song ratings. more>>
Yahoo::Music::Ratings is a method for retrieving a Yahoo! Music members song ratings.

SYNOPSIS

use Yahoo::Music::Ratings;

my $ratings = new Yahoo::Music::Ratings( {
memberName => yahooMusicMemberName,
} );

# Fetch an arrayRef of all yahooMusicMemberName song ratings
# this may take a couple minutes...
my $arrayRef = $ratings->getRatings();

# Print out a nice tab seperated version so that we can easily
# read the list in a spreadsheet program (and then filter by
# artists etc). tab_output() will output in artists alphabetical
# order.
print $ratings->tab_output();

This module provides a way to retrieve a users list of song ratings from Yahoo!s Music service, including the LaunchCast and Unliminted services.

As Yahoo! do not provide an offical feed for a member to download their ratings, the methods used within this module are subject to change and simply may not work tomorrow. However at the time of writing this README i would suspect the methods used should be stable for atleast a few days :)

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Added: 2006-12-06 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1054 downloads
Cowbell Music Organizer 0.2.7.1

Cowbell Music Organizer 0.2.7.1


Cowbell is an elegant music organizer intended to make keeping your collection tidy both fun and easy. more>>
Cowbell Music Organizer is an elegant music organizer intended to make keeping your collection tidy both fun and easy.

Do you ever pull your hair out trying to hand-edit all your tags with some arcane editor? Tell your inner OCD to take a hike because Cowbell is coming into town.

Cowbell is an elegant music organizer intended to make keeping your collection tidy both fun and easy.

Infused with Amazon Web Services SOAP-fu, Cowbell can whip your music platoon into shape without even getting your boots muddy. And, if that isnt enough to make you want to rush to the Download link, Cowbell can also snatch album art and rename your music files like a pro.

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Added: 2006-05-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1266 downloads
Goggles Music Manager 0.8.0

Goggles Music Manager 0.8.0


Goggles Music Manager is a music collection manager and player. more>>
Goggles Music Manager is a music collection manager and player. Goggles Music Manager allows you to easily manage your music collection.

Each song in your collection is organized according to Artist and Album. As of now, Goggles Music Manager supports Ogg Vorbis and MP3 files.

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Download (0.11MB)
Added: 2007-08-16 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
802 downloads
Random Phase Music Generator 2.0

Random Phase Music Generator 2.0


Random Phase Music Generator is a small program that generates random phase music. more>>
Random Phase Music Generator is a small program that generates random phase music. Random music has been around for a long time (from Mozarts musical dice game to John Cages chance music), but phase music was invented rather recently by Steve Reich.

It would be interesting to combine those ideas, so I have written this program as a tool for further experiments. Type xmkmf and then make to compile the program. LessTif users, replace xmkmf with mxmkmf.

If your xmkmf is broken, you have to install manually. Edit Makefile.man (examples for Solaris, AIX and LessTif are provided). Make sure INCS and LIBS are linking to the correct directories, then type make -f Makefile.man to compile.

Run phase from an X terminal. Some users might need to point LD_LIBRARY_PATH to the Motif libraries. After starting up the program, you can use the File menu to load or save the panel settings, and the Music menu to play the generated phase music or save it to a MIDI file.

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Added: 2006-08-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1188 downloads
Common Music 1.0.2

Common Music 1.0.2


Common Music (CM) is an object-oriented music composition environment. more>>
Common Music (CM) is an object-oriented music composition environment.

Common Music produces sound by transforming a high-level representation of musical structure into a variety of control protocols for sound synthesis and display.

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Added: 2007-07-29 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
832 downloads
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