I saw on Ubuntu, that in respository there is a Foobar2000,
but no idea how to install it on MX Linux,
any ideas?
Foobar2000
Re: Foobar2000
It seems from this thread that it works with Wine. An other thread discuss Foobar Snap.
Except if you miss some features there are many great alternatives in Linux world.
Except if you miss some features there are many great alternatives in Linux world.
Re: Foobar2000
I doubt that it's possible. The foobar2000 website shows that it is available for Windows, Android and Ios but there are no binaries listed for Linux and there is no listing for it in Synaptic.
HP 15; ryzen 3 5300U APU; 500 Gb SSD; 8GB ram
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
HP 17; ryzen 3 3200; 500 GB SSD; 12 GB ram
Idea Center 3; 12 gen i5; 256 GB ssd;
In Linux, newer isn't always better. The best solution is the one that works.
Re: Foobar2000
foobar2000 is a Windows app that will run on wine. I think those packages you see for Ubuntu are snap packages with all the required bits (ie wine and foobar2000 in one install). If you're talking about such a package then have a look at this, for instance:
http://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/201 ... ntu-16-04/
There has also been a thread about this: viewtopic.php?t=48002
I have wine-staging installed (not as a snap package, I'm not a fan of these things) and have foobar2000 running on it. It's working flawlessly and everything that I tried works as it does on Windows. YMMV.
http://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/201 ... ntu-16-04/
There has also been a thread about this: viewtopic.php?t=48002
I have wine-staging installed (not as a snap package, I'm not a fan of these things) and have foobar2000 running on it. It's working flawlessly and everything that I tried works as it does on Windows. YMMV.
Frugal installs on Lenovo ThinkPad L14 Ryzen 5 4650U/24GB * HP Pavilion Ryzen 3 3300U/16GB * Toshiba R950 i5-3340M/12GB
I have a reservation... What do you mean it's not in the COMPUTER!
I have a reservation... What do you mean it's not in the COMPUTER!
Re: Foobar2000
It seems that
DeedBeef (horror name) is a music player which eventually can work as a good alternative to Foobar2000
https://alternativeto.net/software/foob ... form=linux
https://www.maketecheasier.com/deadbeef ... c-library/
DeedBeef (horror name) is a music player which eventually can work as a good alternative to Foobar2000
https://alternativeto.net/software/foob ... form=linux
https://www.maketecheasier.com/deadbeef ... c-library/
Re: Foobar2000
Deadbeef is a terrific player, and we have a very recent release in MX Test Repo
Production: 5.10, MX-23 Xfce, AMD FX-4130 Quad-Core, GeForce GT 630/PCIe/SSE2, 16 GB, SSD 120 GB, Data 1TB
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
Personal: Lenovo X1 Carbon with MX-23 Fluxbox
Other: Raspberry Pi 5 with MX-23 Xfce Raspberry Pi Respin
Re: Foobar2000
Seeing how this turned into a "foobar2000 alternatives thread"... Could you upload a screenshot of what your foobar2000 looks like (I guess you were using it on Windows), and what features you couldn't live without?
I used to run foobar2000 in a minimalist tabbed configuration a long time ago, and was excited to know that Audacious and DeaDBeeF do exactly that on Linux*. I'm not a fan of "library organizers", and prefer to manually organize my files into directories. Both Audacious and especially DeaDBeeF support several plugins to make them work better with a music library. I've seen both of them customized to an extensive point, so totally go with if you feel like experimenting.
Amarok, Clementine, and Strawberry** look more like the "complete" foobar2000 UI out of the box, but they are not as modular as DeaDBeeF.
*Audacious was still a Winamp clone at the time, but it had a non-Winamp skin which is the default nowadays.
**Clementine is a fork of Amarok. Strawberry is a fork of Clementine.
I used to run foobar2000 in a minimalist tabbed configuration a long time ago, and was excited to know that Audacious and DeaDBeeF do exactly that on Linux*. I'm not a fan of "library organizers", and prefer to manually organize my files into directories. Both Audacious and especially DeaDBeeF support several plugins to make them work better with a music library. I've seen both of them customized to an extensive point, so totally go with if you feel like experimenting.
Amarok, Clementine, and Strawberry** look more like the "complete" foobar2000 UI out of the box, but they are not as modular as DeaDBeeF.
*Audacious was still a Winamp clone at the time, but it had a non-Winamp skin which is the default nowadays.
**Clementine is a fork of Amarok. Strawberry is a fork of Clementine.
AND1s, tuna, blast processing.
Αν δε βρίσκεις αυτό που ψάχνεις στα Ελληνικά, στείλε μου μήνυμα. Ίσως μπορώ να βοηθήσω.
Αν δε βρίσκεις αυτό που ψάχνεις στα Ελληνικά, στείλε μου μήνυμα. Ίσως μπορώ να βοηθήσω.