My MP3/MP4 does not plug-in and play and therefore I can not transfer any file to the MP3/MP4 dane-elec music my touch or only dane-elec with 8 gb in memory and perhapses model zt1 with radio,..and microsdhc card slot
I tried to install many applications but nothing worked.
With disk utility I can see that Ubuntu can recognize something, that as a peripheral device named rockchip usbdisk user an
Music Players===============[104] Music Player Daemon (MPD)[21] Amarok[18] Music-On-Console (MOC)[15] DeaDBeeF[12] Rhythmbox[12] Audacious[10] MPlayer[9] Clementine[9] gmusicbrowser[8] Goggles Music Manager (gmm)[8] Banshee[6] cmus (C* Music Player)[6] Exaile[5] Quodlibet[3] Miro[2] BeatBox[3] Guayadeque Music Player*[2] Listen[2] Xmms2[1] qmmp[1] ogg123[1] Minirok[1] Pymp[1] Xt7-Player[1] Juk[1]
Hi,
so i recently upgraded to the Galaxy Reverb from an Optimus V. With the optimus, transferring my iTunes music to my SD card was easy. I just dragged and dropped.
I tried this with my Galaxy Reverb and so far my music is hidden from my music player. I can go into the 'my files' folder, see the iTunes music and even play it! (play it from the pre-installed music players...
I like the idea of Google Play Music, especially the part that lets it upload any new music I add to my computer library. I know I can make the music available on my N7 for offline play. I don't like the Google Play Music player. I tried to adjust the volume, but I guess the only way to do that is to use the volume control on the tablet itself.
The Clementine Music Player is an up and coming application that could replace your default music app. It is a close cousin to Amarok with just enough of its own personality to make it stand apart from the crowd. On any computing platform today, users have ample choices of music players. Most of these music player apps have a common look and feel. Some simply play your playlists.
I have around 9gb of music on my SD card, and as you know the media storage thing takes AGES to scan your SD card everytime you boot, so i installed startup manager to disable it. (so as you know they won't show in the stock media player because they have to be scanned first) Anyways i've tried a lot of the free music players on the app store and most just show around 55 songs (the same songs).
Hi guys!
Use a simple music player for Linux. Drag your music files into the program, hit play, listen and enjoy. If you feel like modern music players do way more than what you’re looking for, Audacious could be what you need.It is, in many ways, similar to Winamp circa 1998; it even supports Winamp themes from that era.
Amarok is a great music player for KDE when judged by both its capabilities and it's size. But it's hardly a quick point and click music player - it takes several clicks and some careful GUI navigation to listen to your music collection and that takes a toll on both your CPU and your head.