Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Software : In Depth: Best free MP3 software: 11 programs for playing and managing your music

Software : In Depth: Best free MP3 software: 11 programs for playing and managing your music


In Depth: Best free MP3 software: 11 programs for playing and managing your music

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In Depth: Best free MP3 software: 11 programs for playing and managing your music

If you just want to play a few MP3s, create a playlist or two, then Windows Media Player will help you get started.

Otherwise, though, the program is probably the worst of all worlds - not particularly powerful, or easy to use - and most people will be better off with something else.

What, exactly? That all depends on your needs. There are programs to help automatically tag your music, download album art and more.

Others will clean up even the messiest MP3 collection, quickly organising files into sensibly-named folders. And of course you'll need a great player, to ensure your music sounds its best.

This doesn't have to be complicated, though, because there are plenty of free tools around which can do all of this (and a whole lot more). Just keep reading for our pick of the best free MP3 software to download.

1. iTunes

ITunes is a player; a media browser and organiser, and a tool to help set up your iPod, iPhone and iPad. The iTunes Store helps you to discover new content, and of course you're able to buy some of it, too.

The latest version is more stripped down, too, with a simpler, cleaner interface. Most of the key playback options can be controlled from the Mini Player, creating and managing playlists is easier, and the store works more like it does with iPhones and iPads.

iTunes

ITunes is all about Apple devices, of course, and it does its best to get you into the store (you can't get album art until you're logged in, for instance). But if you don't mind that, this is an excellent player and organiser, and now easier to use than ever.

2. MusicZen

If your Music folder is a real mess, with MP3s scattered everywhere, then getting them properly organised can seem like a real challenge - until you run MusicZen.

Point the program at your folder and it can scan all your MP3s, reading their tags, then copying (or moving) them to new folders based on the artist, album, song title and more.

MusicZen

The files will be consistently renamed, too, so those odd mixes of upper and lower cases, the dash and underscore separators will disappear.

And the program is incredibly simple, with no complex settings to master - you'll have your MP3s reordered in seconds.

3. MP3jam

There are plenty of YouTube search tools around, but MP3jam is a little different: instead of accessing videos, it's all about music.

Just enter a search term - an artist, a song or album title - and it'll quickly return any results (complete with album art, in some cases).

MP3jam

Each song title has a "play" button, allowing you to stream it from the web. You can alternatively download individual songs or entire albums, and the program automatically organises these into folders for you.

4. Winamp

After 16 years of development, it's no surprise that Winamp is one of the most capable music players and managers around.

The program supports 60+ audio and video formats. It can quickly scan your PC for audio files (or import your iTunes library), then organise your music in many different ways, you can create playlists, update and edit your MP3 tags, read more about your favourite artists and access thousands of free audio and video channels.

Winamp

If you need more, there are thousands of plug-ins to explore, and even an Android app.

All these features do make for an occasionally complex interface, and it'll take a while to figure out how everything works. But if you need a powerful player then Winamp remains a good choice.

5. MediaMonkey

ITunes is great, if you want to work with iOS devices. If you also have an Android phone or tablet, though - or you're just looking for a better organiser - then it could be time to give MediaMonkey a try.

The program quickly imports even the largest music libraries, and can then automatically rename your MP3s, moving them into a logical folder structure, automatically fixing tags and alerting you to any duplicates.

MediaMonkey

There are lots of playlist options, while the core player offers lots of features and can be extended with a huge range of effects.

If you want to share your music, it's easy to sync with Apple or Android (and other) devices, or UPnP/ DNLA devices (TVs, Blu-ray players and more).

6. Advanced Renamer

Advanced Renamer is an amazingly powerful tool for renaming, copying or moving files. If your MP3 library is a mess, then it can give your files new names from their audio tags, change the case of a file name, add or remove text, change a file's attributes or timestamps, maybe copy or move MP3's to new locations based on their tags (specific folders for that artist or album, say).

Advanced Renamer

All this power comes at a price, though - Advanced Renamer has a steep learning curve. Experts will love its configurability, and the program isn't only for MP3s. It works just as well with images, videos and other file types.

7. Foorbar2000

If other MP3 organisers and players seem too bulky and complicated, you might prefer Foorbar2000.

Just like the competition, the program helps you build and organise your music library, create playlists, sort out your tags, and more.

Foorbar2000

The interface is very configurable, while a strong core player supports lots of formats, gapless playback, and Replaygain to level out volume across tracks, and more.

Yet despite all this, foorbar2000 requires only 7MB of hard drive space (Winamp needs about 10x more), and can even be installed in "portable" mode, so it won't touch your Registry or install any other components at all.

8. Freemake Audio Converter

Just as its name suggests, Freemake Audio Converter is an excellent tool for converting audio files into a more useful format.

There's support for writing MP3, WMA, WAV, FLAC, AAC, M4A and OGG files. Various audio settings (bitrate, sample rate, channels) help you get the best compromise between image quality and file size.

Freemake Audio Converter

The program can join audio files together, or export its conversions directly to iTunes, and it's even possible to extract and convert the soundtrack of most video files.

9. MP3tag

Changing the tags of one MP3 file is easy (right-click, Properties > Details). When it's hundreds, maybe thousands of tracks, though, you'll need a tool like MP3tag.

The program can automatically import data from various web resources (Amazon, discogs, freedb, MusicBrainz, more), replacing tags in multiple files without you typing anything.

MP3tag

Or you can apply your own rules to tweak tags however you like. Tags can then be used to rename files; there's support for downloading cover art, too, and all this works with a range of tag formats (ID3v1.1, ID3v2.3, ID3v2.4, MP4, WMA, APEv2 Tags and Vorbis Comments).

10. Audacity

Audacity is a capable and feature-packed audio editor, yet is still relatively straightforward to use.

Import an MP3 and you'll see the usual waveform-type display; it's easy to zoom in and select the area you need, and then you can cut or delete it, perhaps copy or paste it elsewhere.

If you need more power, clicking the Effects menu reveals 40 options (Change Pitch, Compressor, Equalization, Normalize and more).

Audacity

There are useful tools to strip off (some) vocals, or clean up recorded audio by removing clicks and other noises.

If this isn't enough then support for LADSPA, Nyquist, VST and Audio Unit plug-ins allows you to extend the program even further.

11. VLC Media Player

If you're looking for a player which is simple, easy to use, but also has some power when you need it, then grab a copy of VLC Media Player.

You can use the program as a very simple, on-demand player. Select one MP3 or an entire album and it'll begin playing, and the interface can be reduced to a single toolbar, maybe some album art.

VLC

The program works with just about every media type, though (music, video, CDs, discs, devices, streams). There's simple media library management, playlist creation and tag editing.

A graphic equalizer, compressor and spatializer help deliver great sound, the interface is extremely configurable, and plug-ins add more power when you need it.

Blip: Kama Sutra iOS app brings augmented reality to the tantric love tome

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Blip: Kama Sutra iOS app brings augmented reality to the tantric love tome

Put a neck tie on the door knob, folks. We got us some sex to talk about.

A new book and iOS app combo is claiming to teach the lessons of the Kama Sutra in a way that may help those baffled by the ancient text before. If you've ever struggled to follow the instructions that come with new IKEA cabinets, this could be for you.

Using augmented reality (AR) the app brings the positions of the Kama Sutra to life, creating a 3D model of the action on the screen of the iPad.

Reality, augmented

Going by the woeful title Kama Xcitra, the book includes AR recognition prints on its pages which the app can "see" through the tablet's camera and it places the animated models within the virtual boundaries of these prints. You can move the camera around the models at see them from all sides.

Karma Xcitra app

Similar technology was included with the Sony PlayStation Vita game console, allowing gamers to create a virtual game space in their living rooms.

It doesn't seem like the models in the tutorials can be heavily customised -- you can't switch the genders around, for example -- but the publisher does advertise that the skin colour can be changed to "reflect the reader's preferences".

If this is exactly the spice you've been looking to add to your evenings (mornings and lunchtimes) you can grab a copy of the book from the publisher's website, or from Amazon.

More blips

You can read more news nuggets here.

Via The Guardian

BLIP: The queue to check your Mailbox has finally dispersed

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BLIP: The queue to check your Mailbox has finally dispersed

Avoiding a queue hundreds of thousands of people long just to check your email seems like common sense, but it's only now becoming possible for people wanting to check out the new Mailbox app for iOS.

Following its buyout by cloud storage behemoths DropBox, the team from MailBox have only just managed to clear away the stragglers, enabling immediate access to the email app on iPhones.

It's still only available for Gmail accounts, but the app has also received an update to improve swiping speeds, smarter snoozing and bug fixes.

It's also up to delivering over 100 million email messages a day, which was enough for the company to decide to take down the waitlist. Whether people are still using the app is up in the air though, with iTunes reviews fragmented between excellent and terrible.

More blips

Want more Blips? You can have more Blips:

Facebook thought about building an operating system to call Home

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Facebook thought about building an operating system to call Home

Facebook floated the idea of building a brand new mobile operating system for its new Home platform, a senior company engineer revealed on Tuesday.

The social network considered three ways to introduce Home; a custom-built OS, a forked version of Android as many had expected, or the recently-launched custom UI that sits neatly on top of Android.

Of course, the company went with the final option, but Facebook's director of mobile engineering Cory Ondrejka admitted that prototypes existed for all three eventualities.

He said: "[Home] was about making an experience that flows through friends and people. We saw three ways that we could do this. One, we could go and build an operating system. Second, we could dig into Android deeply in order to see how we can we fundamentally change / fork Android to make it different. Or, we could build an app to make it different."

Something for everyone (on Android)

Speaking at the D: Dive Into Mobile conference, Ondrejka said the first two options were ditched out of a desire to reach as many people as possible with Facebook Home.

"The OS path was the least fleshed-out of the paths. Mark [Zuckerberg] talked on launch day that he wanted to build something for everyone. It's hard to get to the type of scale that's necessary for us [when building an OS]. We wanted Home in front of hundreds of millions of people - even a successful OS would only give that experience to a few of them," Ondrejka, who was joined on stage by Facebook CTO Mike Schroepfer, added.

The pair also discussed the plans for future roll outs, admitting Facebook Home has been tested on tablets, but will not arrive until it becomes common place on all Android phones.

They also revealed that the first Facebook Home update for Android is coming in May.

Earlier today we brought news that the company was releasing the Facebook Home suite for select Android devices on Google Play stores around the world.

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