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Typically, I put a vinyl record on the turntable, turn on the pre-amp and amplifier, start the turntable and then gently lower the stylus on to the platter.
Ryzen 1800x 8 core/16 thread - 2 x GTX 1070 8Gb, Asus Prime B450 Plus, 32Gb Corsair DDR4, Cooler Master N300 chassis, 5 HD (1 NvME PCI, 4SSD) + 1 x optical.
Linux user #545703
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Clementine is a good player, it doesn't really lack anything compared to best Windows based players, plus it's FOSS. But, you didn't name one of the best players = "Quod Libet", try it, I don't think you will regret it, for me, it is the best player.
Ok, thanks for the advice for "Quod Libet".
Today I started using Audacious. I think it's a great looking program. With all the features I mentioned above for Foobar.
Audacious seems a perfect replacement for Foobar so I might not try "Quod Libet".
It's not that I am looking for a discussion. Clementine does not really do it for me because it stops playing after a few pauses (play button does not work anymore).
This was the case on Ubuntu and now on Arch (with a new GPU and a new CPU and a fresh Arch install on a new SSD).
Sorry I came in a little too loud. I spoke too soon and based on just 2 small bad luck cases.
Great day!
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I like my music spiced with news. That is why I wrote a script that takes news from news podcasts. The script plays these news and music from my favorite mp3 playlists. That is why I use mpg123 a lot. And ffmpeg to trim news broadcasts. Have a look at my github page.
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Since I am an apple sheep I discovered Cider for apple music!
For stored music I use amberol
Archi3
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I like my music spiced with news
It's interesting how different tastes can be - news would actually be the LAST thing I would want to hear while listening to music. But I respect it and your efforts on Github, don't take it personal.
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I say: "$GIRLFRIEND, how about some music? Some {electronic,metal,animesoundtrack,random} playlist, perhaps?"... and - POOF! - music.
A year later and a few updates, $GIRLFRIEND now supports the "Skip this song, please." and "Would you play that again?" commands.
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Awebb wrote:I say: "$GIRLFRIEND, how about some music? Some {electronic,metal,animesoundtrack,random} playlist, perhaps?"... and - POOF! - music.
A year later and a few updates, $GIRLFRIEND now supports the "Skip this song, please." and "Would you play that again?" commands.
$GIRLFRIEND is useful though not infrequently she offers some weird music in response to a request - and I need to "$GIRLFRIEND, please STOP" and re-issue a differently phrased 'request' instead. If you are into ballroom and Latin dance music it can get tortuous, unless you have your own playlists! But on the laptop I mostly resort to VLC playing my own playlists of music I 'know' I will like!
Mike C
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