Thanks Tom and Shane for the tips! What would be the syntax for a Bash script for a problem like this? I tried writing the following script, making it executable, and having that script called when users click on an MP3 in Firefox: #! /bin/bash killall xmms xmms -e {} But I don't think the syntax for including the file to enqueue is right. How would I do that in the script above? thanks, derek Tom Szilagyi wrote: > On Fri, 04 Feb 2005 17:10:56 +0100, derek holzer > <derek@xxxxxxx> wrote: > > >>[...] >>So what I'd like to know is which app will support enqueuing files for playback in a >>single instance? I've tried all the XMMS and Thunderbird options available to me and can't >>come up with the answer. And I can't stand around all day instructing people on how to >>keep the computer from crashing ;-) > > > Hi, > > If I understand your needs corretly, Aqualung (http://aqualung.sf.net) > can do this. It has command line options for loading/enqueuing files > into the playlist, it can start playback immediately (without having > to press the play button on the gui), and you can terminate a running > instance from the command line, again, without needing to press the > little X button in the upper-right corner. > > Basically this is what you will need to run for one user hitting a > link (I don't know how this relates to Mozilla, but I guess you are > able to execute something like a script when a user hits a link): > > $ aqualung -Q > (terminate an already running instance if there is one, > and exit) > $ aqualung -o alsa -L <some-soundfile> > (put file in the playlist and start playing it back > immediately, through alsa in this case.) > > Perhaps you will want to put these two in a script and execute > that from Mozilla. > > Just a suggestion. I'm glad to help if you decide to give it a try. > > > Tom > -- derek holzer ::: http://www.umatic.nl ---Oblique Strategy # 36: "Consult other sources -promising -unpromising"