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Friday, August 28, 2009

Plait is a command-line jukebox and music player front end

plait Plait (pronounced "play") is a command-line jukebox and music player front end. It understands brief, easy to type queries that pick a single song, mix queries that combine works from multiple artists, stream queries that find Shoutcast radio streams, and everything in between.

A variety of filters are available to pick just the music you want to hear. In order to actually play the music it finds, Plait automatically hands off a play list to one of the supported music players (or you can use it manually with any player that supports .m3u playlists). The end result is that you can type commands like.

plait "miles davis" not "in a silent way"
plait --mix mingus monk metheny --tracks 20 --stripe
plait --stream salsa
plait --mixfile punk –interactive

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and Plait will seek out cuts from your library, or radio streams, and play them in your music player. Plait uses UNIX as a compatibility layer to target X Window, Windows with Cygwin, OS X, and the UNIX console.

Plait includes a playlist optimizer that balances the number of cuts selected from each source, reorders cuts according to one of several patterns, and selects cuts that are suitable for the target device you specify. By repeating elements in the query you can weight the balance in favor of a particular artist.

Plait works with all kinds of music players, from mpg123 to Beep Media Player. For those who use command-line players like mpg123, Plait includes a command-line front-end, Plaiter, which adds play, pause, stop and other commands, plus queuing, to mpg123 and similar programs. Plait plus mpg123 is a complete music solution for command-line junkies.

Plait can generate complete web sites containing embedded MP3 playlists, complete with album art, using the XSPF Web Music Player (http://musicplayer.sourceforge.net).

Getting started

For a quickstart, click on the download button and follow the Install Guide for Plait.

The README for Plait will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about Plait, the command-line jukebox and music player front-end.

There is also a README for Plaiter, the command-line front end to command-line music players. Plaiter is a subproject which was designed to be the perfect command-line music player for Plait. It combines helper applications like mpg123 and ogg123 into a general purpose command line music player.





News

Feb. 22, 2009: The code has moved into Sourceforge-hosted revision control. A small number of slots are available with write access, so get in touch if you are interested in contributing patches or maintaining Plait.

Feb. 16, 2009: Due to a lack of spare time and because the interesting ideas I had for Plait would be more useful in new projects that are a little more relevant, active development (by me) is over. If you have an interesting idea for a new feature, it can be contributed in the form of a patch but not as a feature request.

Sep. 14, 2008: Release 1.6.2: maintenance release. Another instance of the security flaw fixed in 1.6 was found, so the codebase was reviewed for all uses of temp files. This release should be free of all temp file vulnerabilities.

Sep. 11, 2008: Release 1.6.1: maintenance release to track the new Shoutcast URLs. This will get your stream queries working again. Thanks go to Peter and David for the quick fix.

Aug. 30, 2008: Release 1.6: fix for a major security flaw, mplayer support, and Busybox support so you can run it on a network storage device or an Internet tablet.

July, 2008: Hey! Plait has been added to Debian.

Oct. 9, 2006: Release 1.5.2 introduces a new installer.

Sep. 4, 2006: Release 1.5.1 fixes many minor bugs in the XSPF web publishing feature.

Aug. 31, 2006: Release 1.5 adds support for XSPF Web Music Player.

June 6, 2006: Release 1.4.2 adds minor feature enhancements.

Apr. 26, 2006: Release 1.4.1 fixes two bugs in Plaiter

Apr. 25, 2006: Release 1.4 adds interactive mode.

Mar. 27, 2006: Release 1.3 adds support for amaroK and Beep Media Player.

Feb. 21, 2006: Release 1.2 adds a playlist optimizer.

Jan. 16, 2006: Release 1.1 adds support for iTunes on Cygwin.

Dec. 26, 2005: Release 1.0 stable fixes a minor bug.

Nov. 14, 2005: Release 0.99, the first beta release, adds pass-through commands like play, pause, and next track.



Answer the questions and win a Sony NV-U93T Navigation Device!

Oct. 25, 2005: Release 0.55 introduces Plaiter, the command-line front end to command-line music players.

Oct. 11, 2005: Release 0.54 adds support for Linux.

Oct. 2, 2005: Release 0.53 adds support for complex queries against the Shoutcast directory.

Sept. 21, 2005: Release 0.52 adds support for mix files. See the documentation for details.

Sept. 16, 2005: Release 0.51 is a minor bug fix for iTunes.

Sept. 9, 2005: Initial public release.

Download


source: SourceForge.net/plait



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Thursday, August 27, 2009

MusicBrainz Picard is a cross-platform MusicBrainz tag editor written in Python

picard_tagger MusicBrainz is a community music metadatabase that attempts to create a comprehensive music information site. You can use the MusicBrainz data either by browsing this web site, or you can access the data from a client program — for example, a CD player program can use MusicBrainz to identify CDs and provide information about the CD, about the artist or about related information. You can also use the MusicBrainz Tagger to automatically identify and clean up the metadata tags in your digital music collections

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Picard is the next generation MusicBrainz tagging application. This new tagging concept is album oriented, as opposed to track/file oriented like the ClassicTagger was. Picard is written in Python, which is a cross-platform language, and makes use of cross-platform libraries - this allows the same code to run both on Windows, Linux and Mac OS X.

Since version 0.7.0, MusicBrainz Picard supports automatic identifying of audio files through the MusicDNS service using the Open Fingerprint Architecture acoustic fingerprinting technology.

Version 0.9.0 is a complete rewrite of the MusicBrainz Picard codebase, motivated by switch from wxPython to PyQt and Mac OS X support.

Supported file formats:

* MP3, TTA (ID3)
* Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, Speex (VorbisComment)
* Musepack, WavPack, OptimFROG, Monkey's Audio (APEv2 tag)
* AAC, ALAC (MP4)
* Windows Media Audio
* WAV

MusicBrainz Picard is named after the character Captain Jean-Luc Picard from the TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation.





Documentation for Users

These are all the documents that should help users of Picard:

Ubuntu Install

sudo apt-get install picard

Source Code Tarball

Image:download.gif picard-0.11.tar.gz (432K)
(MD5: 02ddcff3e201b2cf54f1b52b02d44fad)

License

Picard is licensed under the GPL 2.0 or later.

Plugins

Are listed and available for download at PicardPlugins.

Development Source Code

The source code of Picard is maintained in Bazaar, the main development branch is hosted on Launchpad and you can get the source code with all its history using:

    bzr branch http://bazaar.launchpad.net/~musicbrainz-developers/picard/trunk picard


source: MusicBrainz


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Sunday, August 23, 2009

ArchLinux vs Google AdSense


Why I’m quitting GMail

Lots of people have expressed fear at the power Google has over our information. I don’t intend to expound on that. Suffice it to say that they know more about me than I do.

It’s never bothered me. I have always trusted Google to take care of this information. They’ve always been on the same side of privacy, net neutrality, and copyright debates as me. They’re extremely active in the open source world and they seem to value open source rather than simply using us. I trust them.

I used to trust them.

A couple weeks ago, Aaron (head developer of Arch Linux) received an e-mail from Google Adsense telling us our account had been terminated:

While going through our records recently, we found that your AdSense
account has posed a significant risk to our AdWords advertisers. Since
keeping your account in our publisher network may financially damage our
advertisers in the future, we’ve decided to disable your account.

Please understand that we consider this a necessary step to protect the
interests of both our advertisers and our other AdSense publishers. We
realize the inconvenience this may cause you, and we thank you in advance
for your understanding and cooperation.

How are we a risk to advertisers? What are we doing wrong? How do we fix it? No explanation. Aaron, of course, asked for clarification. They regurgitated the response:

Thanks for providing us with additional information. However, after
thoroughly reviewing your account data and taking your feedback into
consideration, we’ve re-confirmed that your account poses a significant
risk to our advertisers. For this reason, we’re unable to reinstate your
account. Thank you for your understanding.

As a reminder, if you have any questions about your account or the actions
we’ve taken, please do not reply to this email. You can find more
information by visiting
https://www.google.com/adsense/support/bin/answer.py?answer=57153

Following instruction for obtaining more info, Aaron posted here: http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/AdSense/thread?tid=029aef7a42e7c4f2&hl=en&fid=029aef7a42e7c4f20004707fc5d9ce9e

Still no additional information. I find this offensive. We are an honest, upstanding, unfunded open source Linux Distribution. We have done nothing wrong.

I respect Google’s right to choose where they place ads. If I was a marketing agency for companies that sell adult products, I wouldn’t post advertisements in a daycare or during Saturday morning cartoons. However to cancel our account without giving us a chance to fix or even understand their rationale is troubling.

The money from Adsense is mediocre at best, compared to our donations and schwag income. But this event caused me to reevaluate my trust of this mammoth company. I’m not suddenly “OMG Google is evil, I must not use their products.” (As a teen I had this tendency toward Microsoft products. I’ve matured a bit and can acknowledge that Microsoft has some good products: their mice and keyboards.) However, I now feel less comfortable giving this company full control of my information.

And thus, I am slowly moving my e-mail account from GMail to my own domain. I’m considering anonymizing my Google cookie. I’m reluctant to put my own or client data on Google App engine. I’m losing enthusiasm for my Android powered phone (that has as much to do with Java as it does with Google, to be honest), and evaluating all new exciting Google services with just a hint of distrust.

Google still creates some of the best technology in the world, and they are still mostly friendly to the open source community. They are a large company and the actions of one department obviously don’t reflect the opinions of others. Adsense is Google’s cash cow. The more exciting Google projects occur in research and innovation. There isn’t much communication between the two.

I am looking forward to Google Wave (I intend to set up my own host, of course) and to an anonymized version of Chromium for Linux. I have no problem with Google Gears. I still use their maps, but I’ll have to stay off Latitude.

source: ArchLinux


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OpenShot Non Linear Video Editor for Linux

OpenShot Video Editor is an open-source, non-linear video editor for Linux, built with Python, GTK, and the MLT Framework. The project was started in August 2008 by Jonathan Thomas.

OpenShot's Features include:

* Support for many video, audio, and image formats (based on FFmpeg)
* Gnome integration (drag and drop support)
* Multiple tracks
* Clip resizing, trimming, snapping, and cutting
* Video transitions with real-time previews
* Compositing, image overlays, watermarks
* Title templates, title creation
* Inkscape integration for designing titles and credits
* Scrolling motion picture credits
* Solid color clips (including alpha compositing)
* Support for Rotoscoping / Image sequences
* Drag and drop timeline
* Frame stepping, key-mappings: J,K, and L keys
* Video encoding (based on FFmpeg)
* Key Frame animation
* Digital zooming of video clips
* Speed changes on clips (slow motion etc)
* Custom transition lumas and masks
* Re-sizing of clips (frame size)
* Audio mixing and editing
* Presets for key frame animations and layout

OpenShot provides extensive editing and compositing features, and has been designed as a practical tool for working with high-definition video including HDV and AVCHD.

After many long nights, and many frustrating days of work, I am proud to announce a set of 25 Debian Installers, spread out across 6 Ubuntu distributions! Why 25 installers you ask? Well, let me break it down for everyone:

OpenShot is just a Python program, so we just need 1 installer for that. Check.
x264, Frie0r, FFmpeg, and MLT. That's 4 more. Check.

Now, since these "dependency" packages are not Python, we need to be sure and build these 4 packages against the following versions of Ubuntu:

32 Bit - Ubuntu 8.04
32 Bit - Ubuntu 8.10
32 Bit - Ubuntu 9.04
-------------------------
64 Bit - Ubuntu 8.04
64 Bit - Ubuntu 8.10
64 Bit - Ubuntu 9.04
So, that's 6 distributions X 4 packages = 24 deb installers. + 1 OpenShot installer, so that equals 25 deb installers.

I have created an archive for each set of dependencies, and added them to the official download page. After you get everything installed, you will only need to update the main OpenShot.deb file as I release new versions. In other words, you only have to install the dependencies one time. Also, just to be clear, OpenShot is still very much in development, and is changing rapidly. This is not an official release... just an easier-to-install developer snapshot.

Soon I will be adding the completed language translations to the download page as well. These will be .deb installers as well. Please be patient with the translations, as it might take a few days to get these setup and uploaded. =)

I'm going to come right out and say it. I am not an expert Debian package creator, and I'm sure there are better ways to create these .deb files. If you happen to be an expert in this area, please join our LaunchPad team and help us improve our packaging. =) Thanks.


source: OpenShot



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