Clementine is a free opensource Music player released under GPL v3 license. It is a port the Amarok music player taking advantage of Qt4 features focusing on a fast and easy-to-use interface for searching and playing your music. Clementine has a nice and neat interface and looks much quicker and faster.
- Search and play your local music library with a queue manager.
- scan and Copy music to your iPod, iPhone (requires iTunes), MTP or mass-storage USB player.
- Remote control using a Wii Remote, MPRIS or the command-line.
- Listen to internet radio from Last.fm, SomaFM and Magnatune.
- Tabbed playlists, import and export M3U, XSPF, PLS and ASX.
- Visualisations from projectM.
- Transcode music into MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Ogg Speex, FLAC or AAC.
- Edit tags on MP3 and OGG files, organise your music.
- Download missing album cover art from Last.fm.
- Native desktop notifications on Linux (libnotify) and Mac OS X (Growl).
Clementine is a fork of Amarok 1.4 and is available on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux. It sports the same powerful library management and playback features as its predecessor and can manage many. Clementine is a cross-platform free and open source music player and library organizer based on Amarok 1.4. Created by David Sansome and John Maguire. Free Open Source; Mac; Windows; Linux; BSD; Discontinued.
- Clementine is a multi-platform music player and library organizer inspired by Amarok 1.4. It has a fast and easy-to-use interface, and allows you to search and play music from your local library, internet radio, songs you’ve uploaded to cloud storage, and more! Use this as an open source alternative to itunes or spotify.
- It may all take a bit to learn, and the interface has a bit of a dated look, but the sheer number of options lets Clementine remain one of the top Mac media players available. Editors' Recommendations.
Clementine Os
Some people were disappointed when Amarok 2.0 was released, it had changed a lot from the tried and trusted 1.4 and not to everyone's liking. Amarok 1.4 was still around, but uses the older QT libraries, which modern distros do not install. Being open source, it was almost inevitable that someone would take the Amarok 1.4 source code and begin porting it to QT4. What was far less inevitable was that the porting project would reach the stage of a usable release, but that is exactly what Clementine has done.
Porting to QT4 has two advantages, not only does it mean that Clementine can run on modern distros without needing older libraries, but QT4 is also available for Windows and MacOS X, so Clementine is now truly cross-platform.
If you ever used the older Amarok, you will feel immediately at home with Clementine. Some of the more esoteric features have not made it across (yet) but that's not necessarily a bad thing, Amarok was already beginning to get quite bloated (or feature rich, depending on your point of view) by the 1.4 release. The basics are there, playlist management, ID tag editing and Last.fm integration. The latter not only allows you to listen to music from Last.fm, you need an account there, but it can also download cover art from their site. Clementine can also play streamed audio fro many Internet radio stations, although it doesn't have the podcast support of Amarok 2.
If you want a basic but functional music player that fits in with a KDE desktop, you won't go far wrong with Clementine, even at this early stage of its development.
Version 1.3 major new features (see changelog for more), include:
- Vk.com support
- Seafile support (server >= 4.4.1)
- Add Ampache compatibility (through Subsonic service)
- Add new analyzer 'Rainbow Dash'
- Answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything
- Add 'Psychedelic Colour' mode to all analyzers
Clementine Player Mac Os X 10.11
Verdict:
Clementine Player Download
f you yearn for the good old days when Amarok just played music, this is the player for you.