Amarok

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Amarok is a free software music player for Linux and other varieties of Unix. It makes use of core components from the K Desktop Environment, but is released independently of the central KDE release cycle.

Despite the fact that Amarok uses wolf-based artwork, and that the name "amarok" or "amaroq" literally refers to the Inuktitut word for "wolf", it was originally named after the album Amarok by Mike Oldfield. If you play the tune in this player, a window with information about the name will be shown. The 1.2 release originally had a wolf icon, but this was later withdrawn due to similarity with the logo of WaRP Graphics Inc. Amarok's wolf logo has now been modified sufficiently so as not to infringe on WaRP's trademark logo, and re-instated.

Originally named amaroK, it was renamed to Amarok in June 2006.

Contents

History

The project was originally started by Mark Kretschmann as a means of bettering XMMS due to several usability problems, which interfered with the addition of new files to the playlist due to several user interface elements existing for one task. The original amaroK was created based upon the idea of a two-pane interface seen in Midnight Commander, and the first version of the software released solely by Kretschmann, was based upon the ideal of allowing users to drag-and-drop music into an interface in which the playlist was displayed on the right and information on the left.

After the initial release of amaroK, several developers joined the project to form the "Three M's" the first of whom was Max Howell, who acted as an interface designer and programmer for the project, alongside Muesli (Christian Muehlhaeuser), who also provided user interface insight and programming till the late 1.4 versions.

Development goals

Amarok's tagline is "Rediscover Your Music", and its development is based around this ideology. Amarok's core features such as the unique "context browser", integrated Wikipedia lookup and lyrics download help users to find new music, and to learn more about the music they have. Amarok also features integration with last.fm, giving users suggestions about what to listen to next and which artists may fit their mood, as well as with Magnatune integration, allowing no-cost full listening of all the music in their catalog, and DRM-free purchasing.

Features

Basic Uses and Functions

Amarok serves many functions rather than just playing music files. For example, Amarok can be used to organize a library of music into folders according to genre, artist, and album, can edit tags attached to most music formats, associate album art, attach lyrics, and automatically "score" music as you play it. Thus, the first run of Amarok can be daunting for some users. Users that find the interface difficult to navigate due to the many features may hide some features (such as by closing tabs) but may simply prefer a simpler audio player. The abundance of features has also attracted some criticism that Amarok is resource-intensive or "bloated."

Although a more technical list of features is listed below, here are the primary functions or uses for Amarok:

From version 1.4.4, Amarok introduced the integration of Magnatune, a non-DRM digital music store, enabling users to purchase music in Ogg, FLAC, WAV and MP3 VBR formats.

Some of these features depend on other programs or libraries that must be installed on a computer to operate, with some of the features such as support for newer iPods and AAC tag editing only accessible if Amarok is compiled from source as some distributions exclude them.

The newest stable release of Amarok, with the sixth release of the 'Fast Forward' series (1.4.5), includes an integrated Shoutcast stream directory, custom labels, some improvements in the Magnatune music store, an improved sound quality with the equalizer of xine, the full list of new features, fixes and improvements of Amarok are available at the Amarok site

While Amarok can be used with all Linux desktop environments, Linux users running environments such as GNOME instead than KDE may notice visual inconsistencies. Other projects, such as Exaile have been initiated to attempt to bring Amarok's functionality to a gtk-based program.

More Technical Features

File:Amarok2.png
Amarok 1.4.5 and Moodbar functionality
Amarok 1.4.3 and Wikipedia article functionality

Amarok 2.0

The next release of Amarok, version 2.0 is currently in development. The next version will make use of KDE 4 technology like Phonon for audio and Solid for device interaction, along with extensive use of SVG and Plasma for the interface. Amarok will also have better integration with online services, Magnatune, Jamendo, Ampache and Mp3locker are already supported. A robust services framework will make adding support for other services much easier <ref>http://ljubomir.simin.googlepages.com/awnissue10</ref>. This release will also add support for Windows and OS X, along with many other KDE 4 applications<ref>http://amarok.kde.org/blog/archives/545-More-good-news-for-Windows-Amarok-users-to-be.html</ref>.

Version history

Version Codename Release date Important changes
first public release July 20, 2003
0.6.0 September 20, 2003
0.7.0 November 16, 2003 support for cross fading, customizable columns
1.0 June 17, 2004 collection with search, file browser, download covers from Amazon, statistics
1.1 I am a rock September 27, 2004 ratings, support for Xine, MAS and K3B
1.2 February 14, 2005 support for iPod, Audiscrobbler, MySQL, themeable Contextbrowser
1.3 Airborne August 14, 2005 new playlist browser, work on interface, dynamic playlists, support for podcasts, relative paths in playlists, playlist queue, Wikipedia integration, cuesheets
1.3.9 Airborne March 26, 2006 Helix and GStreamer engine, nicer interface, work on podcast support
1.4 Fast Forward May 17, 2006 improved support for mobile devices, work on memory usage and interface design, integration of Last.FM into the context browser, gapless playback using Xine, lyrics now fetched with scripts, advanced Wikipedia integration, CD ripping via drag n drop, improved handling of podcasts
1.4.1 Fast Forward July 2, 2006 improved performance and usability, name changed from amaroK to Amarok, Last.FM streams, rating via scripts
1.4.2 Fast Forward August 22, 2006 DAAP client, MTP media device support, dynamic collection, custom Last.FM stations
1.4.3 Fast Forward September 5, 2006 AFT (Amarok File Tracking)
1.4.4 Fast Forward October 30, 2006 Magnatune integration, 3 different ways of crossfading with Xine and helix engine
1.4.5 Fast Forward February 4, 2007 SHOUTcast streams, labels
1.4.6 Fast Forward June 21, 2007 new icon set, Rockbox support
1.4.7 Fast Forward August 13, 2007 updated icon and Cool Streams
2.0.0 T.B.A T.B.A. complete redesign of interface, increased graphical features, full list here. This version will add support for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X.


Amarok is the music player for Linux and Unix with an intuitive interface. Amarok makes playing the music you love easier than ever before - and looks good doing it.


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