Digital Audio Players for Linux?
David Kramer
david at thekramers.net
Sun Jan 22 19:21:41 EST 2006
Bill Ricker wrote:
> Mention was made the other night of openness/freeness of brands of
> digital audio players. Which current models are Linux-friendly, in terms
> of being able to load podcasts and tracks from a linux system? Act as a
> USB drive?
My previous MP3 player was the fabulous-if-you're geeky iRiver iHP-120,
which is probably the unit that Mad Dog was talking about. It had more
features than you could ever ask for, but a complicated UI. Just like I
Like them. It mounted like a hard drive, and did like three different
codecs, and a built-in FM tuner.
When it died, while still under the "why did I pay for this" extended
warranty from Best Buy, they said that unit wasn't made anymore, and I
could get a credit towards another MP3 player. Unfortunately, the newer
iRiver models are DRM'ed up the wazoo, and cannot mount like a hard
drive. Very few on the market still do, or at least ones that had the
other features I needed.
I ended up getting a Creative Zen Touch 40GB. It does not mount like a
hard drive. However, there are several Linux programs that can talk to
it, most of which are excellent. I use gnomad2, which lets me search
and sort, build playlists, transfer MP3s and other files, and edit the
MP3 tag data. Its default screen is a two-pane window with your local
system on the left and the MP3 player on the right. Very easy to use.
There's very little I miss by having to use this program over mounting
like a hard drive, especially since I keep a copy of gnomad2 on my thumb
drive, if I ever needed to access it from a different machine.
I'm almost completely happy with the unit, The only downside of it is
that they tried to be a little too ipod-like, and there's a slide
control that's touch-sensitive like the ipod wheel, but doesn't work
nearly as well. Not a major problem, though.
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