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You may prefer vinyl and cassette tapes or VHS and Laserdisc, but it's still most likely that you consume the majority of the media you enjoy on a digital device. There's a convenience to media on a computer that can't be matched, largely because most of us are near a computer for most of the day. Many modern computer users don't give much thought to what applications are available for listening to music and watching movies because most operating systems provide a media player by default or because they subscribe to a streaming service and don't keep media files around themselves. But if your tastes go beyond the usual hit list of popular music and shows, or if you work with media for fun or profit, then you have local files you want to play. You probably also have opinions about the available user interfaces. On Linux, choice is a mandate, and so your options for media playback are endless.


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A modern, clean, and minimal media player. Thanks to its Mplayer, ffmpeg, and libmpv backends, it can play any kind of media you're likely to throw at it. And I do mean "throw at it" because the quickest and easiest way to start a file playing is just to drag the file onto the mpv window. Should you drag more than one file, mpv creates a playlist for you.

Kaffeine is actually much more than just a music player. It can play video files, DVDs, CDs, and even digital TV (assuming you have an incoming signal). I've gone whole days without closing Kaffeine, because no matter whether I'm in the mood for music or movies, Kaffeine makes it easy to start something playing.

The Audacious media player is a lightweight application that can play your music files (even MIDI files) or stream music from the Internet. Its main appeal, for me, is its modular architecture, which encourages the development of plugins. These plugins enable playback of nearly every audio media format you can think of, adjust the sound with a graphic equalizer, apply effects, and even reskin the entire application to change its interface.

It's hard to think of Audacious as just one application because it's so easy to make it into the application you want it to be. Whether you're a fan of XMMS on Linux, WinAmp on Windows, or any number of alternatives, you can probably approximate them with Audacious. Audacious also provides a terminal command, audtool, so you can control a running instance of Audacious from the command line, so it even approximates a terminal media player!

The VLC player is probably at the top of the list of applications responsible for introducing users to open source. A tried and true player of all things multimedia, VLC can play music, video, optical discs. It can also stream and record from a webcam or microphone, making it an easy way to capture a quick video or voice message. Like mpv, it can be controlled mostly through single-letter keyboard presses, but it also has a helpful right-click menu. It can convert media from one format to another, create playlists, track your media library, and much more. VLC is the best of the best, and most players don't even attempt to match its capabilities. It's a must-have application no matter what platform you're on.

The music player daemon (mpd) is an especially useful player, because it runs on a server. That means you can fire it up on a Raspberry Pi and leave it idling so you can tap into it whenever you want to play a tune. There are many clients for mpd, but I use ncmpc. With ncmpc or a web client like netjukebox, I can contact mpd from the local host or a remote machine, select an album, and play it from anywhere.

Playing media on Linux is easy, thanks to its excellent codec support and an amazing selection of players. I've only mentioned five of my favorites, but there are many, many more for you to explore. Try them all, find the best, and then sit back and relax.

I've tried many other music managers and players, and for me gmusicbrowser is very much the best. The tag editor is very powerful, it automatically retrieves lyrics, the layout of the player is highly customizable.

While I pretty much use VLC by default, I'm surprised Gnome's Lolipop player wasn't mentioned since it's pretty much a backed-in tool for the desktop. I also like using Strawberry once in a while just to test stuff randomly.

Thanks for reminding me of this great media player! I was a fan of it but with Amarok shipping by default on my distro, I kept defaulting to it. But Sayonara is great; maybe I'll do an article about it sometime.

Yet another impressive open-source video player (technically, a video player engine). MPlayer may not offer you an intuitive user experience but it supports a wide range of output drivers and subtitle files.

As mentioned, SMPlayer uses MPlayer as the playback engine. So, it supports a wide range of file formats. In addition to all the basic features, it also lets you play YouTube videos from within the video player (by getting rid of the annoying ads).

It is a quite powerful video player capable of handling a variety of file formats and codecs. You can customize its look by using skins and enhancing the functionalities with the help of certain extensions. Other features, like subtitle synchronization, audio/video filters, etc., exist as well.

The default video player for distros with GNOME desktop environment (previously known as Totem). It supports all the major file formats and lets you snap while playing a video. Similar to some of the others, it is a very simple and useful video player. You can try it out if you want.

Clapper is a minimal video player designed with a GTK4 toolkit. It uses GStreamer for the media backend and OpenGL for rendering. While it is not a comprehensive media player like VLC, it is one of the visually pleasing applications available for Linux.

Kaffeine is an audio and video player of the KDE ecosystem. It offers several powerful features such as watching and recording digital TV. Since it is based on the libVLC framework, all media formats supported in the VLC player will be supported by kaffeine also.

No matter how many times I update my drivers or the software, VLC still gets pixelated and laggy. I used Kylin but it's messed up since updating my OS. So what is the best video player for Linux that just looks and feels newish?

DeaDBeeF is an audio player software available for Linux, Android and other Unix-like operating systems. DeaDBeeF is free and open-source software, except on Android. The player was first published in August 2009. Its author cited dissatisfaction with existing music players under Linux as the main reason for writing DeaDBeeF. The name is a reference to magic number 0xDEADBEEF. Among DeaDBeeF's functionalities are included:

The best players for your requirements are probably DeaDBeeF and Rhythmbox. DeaDBeeF is more similar to foobar2000. Some familiar features are a layout editor, plugins, and fb2k title formatting scripts.

You can look at music servers such as dnla servers as well as plex to allow you to store all your music on a nas and share it out to other devices.

There are also web based players such as ampache that you install on your webserver to share your music then all you need is a browser to play music.

I purchased a SanDisk Clip Sport Plus MP3 player this week, but upon plugging it in to my desktop, Pop!_OS did not immediately recognize and mount it for me. Some devices will automatically be detected and mounted, like this USB disk:

After unmounting and unplugging the device, and then plugging it back in to my computer, I did need to run command sudo parted -l to force the device to mount once again. Playback of audio files works as expected on the MP3 player ?

after some problems in our deployment of the Linux player and realizing that it was basically unmaintained, I spent a bit of time to implement a similar player for Linux. It is of course not quite as complete as the existing one, and covers what we need currently. You can have a look here:

Since I couldn't find such a player, I implemented one for my own use as a Python script, which supports playing .m3u files, and calls mplayer with the proper -ss value to resume playback where it left off last time. Get it from (project page: ).

I want to find a video player (.mp3 .flac .mp4 .rmvb etc.) which can open all the file in the folder and create a list when I open one file, as PotPlayer and Tencent Player do. I found that VLC and the default player on GNOME cannot do this. Is there any video players recommended?

As long as is not hardware related video player, but software, we can recommend with no restrain.

@Firestar

smplayer is in our repositories, and as a front-end to mplayer is super cool and fast. Give it a try.

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I don't really have great expectations about the music player. It must be possible to play and pause sound files in as much codecs as possible and turn the volume up and down. Also it has to be a headless player since I am not running any desktop environment. There are a lot of players like that out there, it seems. mpg123 for example, works well for all I need.

The problem I have now is that all of these players seem to have a user interface written in ncurses and I have no idea how to access this with the Python subprocess module. So, I either need a music player which comes with Python bindings or one which can be controlled with the command line via the subprocess module. At least these are the solutions I thought about by now. ff782bc1db

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