> Have you tried using Audacious ? Just did. No thanks. /me uninstalls those five RPMs... > You can set it to classic mode, at which point it user experience is > identical to xmms. No, it's not. It's close enough to fool someone who doesn't use xmms regularly, but it's different enough to really annoy those of us who do. Reminds me of a friend who hates anything gtk-on-windows because it looks enough like windows that your instinct is to use your windows techniques, but it's different enough to burn you every time you try that. > With the advantage that it uses a modern toolkit, Disadvantage, if you ask me. First thing audacious did was spew random errors to the screen and change my Firefox and emacs cursors. Then it ask which of the most recent minecraft jar files I wanted to listen to. When I finally located my *music* folder in its playlist chooser, it refused to play my shoutcast streams, instead filling the log window with more useless errors. I managed to find one .wav it would play, and it defaulted to 120% volume which made it sound like crap (well, more like crap, since I still haven't figured out how to get pulseaudio to use my digital audio outputs). All this was before I figured out how to switch it to Winamp mode (not xmms mode) but it doesn't support all the customization options that xmms does, so it didn't look or act like xmms. Plus, the playlist management system is completely different. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel