Hi. I have an external hard drive with 40,000 songs on it. Ever since I have owned a Chromebook I have struggled to find an app/ Linux software that works as a complete music player (like musicbee on windows). I have tried installing wine and getting foobar/musicbee but it doesn't work (I might be doing it wrong!?). Any suggestions or ideas for something that works? Thanks!

I am buying a Chromebook for the very first time at the end of the month. I also happen to have an iPhone 5C. Now, am i correct in saying that (after my minimum research) there is no direct way to transfer music files (.mp3) to an iPhone via a Chromebook am i correct?


How To Download Google Play Music To Chromebook


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Another way to use an iphone with a chromebook is to use Google apps on your iPhone. Anything in those Apps is available immediately on your Chromebook. I also have a Macbook and I find that the synching of files is faster and easier by using Google apps.

You can use Google Play Music to upload music from your chromebook to iPhone. Upload your music to Google Play Music on your chromebook. Install the Google Play Music app on your phone from the app store, and download the music for offline listening.

On September 5, 2019, Apple released the web version of Apple Music in a Beta version, which was available to all subscribers around the world. After half a year of public testing, Apple made it official. This means that we can enjoy Apple Music songs on Chromebook with Apple Music web player.

We mentioned above that Android apps are only available on certain Chromebook models. If you use Apple Music Web Player to play songs online, it will also occupy a certain amount of bandwidth. Many companies limit the websites that can be accessed, and you may not be able to use the Apple Music web player to play online. It would be great if it could be played offline. According to Google support page, Chromebook supports following media formats: .3gp, .avi, .mov, .mp4, .m4v, .m4a, .mp3, .mkv, .ogv, .ogm, .ogg, .oga, .webm, .wav.

TuneMobie Apple Music Converter can convert Apple Music songs to Chromebook supported audio formats like MP3, M4A, WAV, etc. with a built-in web player on Windows or macOS. It comes with an easy-to-use interface and 20X faster conversion speed, provides flexible output options and high-quality output files. Let's check the wonderful features below.

TuneMobie Apple Music Converter is very easy-to-use. With only a few clicks, you can convert an album or a playlist to MP3, M4A or WAV in only a few minutes. Then we can copy the output files to USB drive or upload to Google drive, and enjoy the converted Apple Music songs on Chromebook with ease. You can check the steps below as reference.

Launch TuneMobie Apple Music Converter and you will see a built-in Apple Music web player. Click "Sign In" button at the upper right to sign in the Apple Music web player. You don't need to enter Apple ID and password next time if you don't sign out.

You can easily find a button in the center right, move your mouse to the button and it will be changed to "Add to list" button. Click "Add to list" button to add all the songs in the album/playlist to conversion list.

If necessary, you can use the "Files" app to make the converted Apple Music songs available offline, which help you to play the converted Apple Music songs when your Chromebook is not connected to the internet.

Now you know how to play Apple Music songs on Chromebook in different ways. You can play Apple Music songs on Chromebook directly via Apple Music web player or Android app, or you can convert Apple Music songs to MP3/M4A/WAV on Windows or macOS first, then play them via USB drive or Google drive.

If you want to play Apple Music songs on Chromebook without an internet connection, then TuneMobie Apple Music Converter and a USB drive is the best solution. The converter is the best solution to help you enjoy Apple Music songs on Chromebook after you cancel the subscription. If you have a Windows or Mac computer, a valid Apple Music subscription and a Chromebook, do not hesitate to download the free trial version to have a try now.

All our experiments are all built with freely accessible web technology such as Web Audio API, WebMIDI, Tone.js, and more. These tools make it easier for coders to build new interactive music experiences. You can get the open-source code to lots of these experiments here on Github.

Hi, all. I'm a new member, struggling to figure out how to put together a system for listening to all of the CDs I've had sitting around unused for far too long. I thought I could rip the CDs (FLAC) onto a nice big hard drive, then use VLC on a Chromebook to play them, running through (I suppose) some sort of DAC so they sound better, into my ancient Onkyo TX-830. However, I can't seem to find VLC for my Chromebook. Anyone know why? Is my Chromebook too old, perhaps? It's an Acer Chromebook 11. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks!

There is an Android port of VLC that will run on chromebooks that will run those ported Android apps. The chromebook I have is on the list as one that can support such apps, but so far doesn't. I fear it will always be that way. Here is the list which I'm not sure how up to date it is.

I have an Acer Chromebook 11 also and to play music I just navigate to the file and double-click to play. It plays via the built-in audio function. Very rudimentary but functional. Alternatively you can right-click and choose Google Play Music as the player if you have the app installed, as do I.

Thanks, Melvin. I was planning to send the music to some old Boston Acoustic speakers that I've had in storage, and I was assuming that if I use the native player (which I'm guessing will only play the files as mp3s), they won't sound as good. Am I wrong? I'm a bit embarrassed to admit that I've never really listened to mp3s (except on my phone, where I assume it doesn't make any difference), and have never sent mp3s through those speakers, so I don't know how they'd sound.

I understand that Chrome OS "supports" FLAC . . . by reading FLAC files and playing them as MP3s. I am trying to find a way to listen to FLAC files, on the assumption that they will sound better than MP3s.

I have a couple Chromebooks I use only for business so haven't tested this, but there are music apps in the Chrome Web Store. Do they work on a Chromebook? I searched for "music player flac" and got these:

Welp, I could swear that's what I found when I went googling about Chrome OS and FLAC: a bunch of sites that hailed Chrome OS "support" of FLAC files, and then one or two that added a big caveat that although it could read them, it would play them as mp3s. Of course, now that I'm looking for that again, I can't find it. So maybe I was deluded. It has happened before.

Right, no Chromebook yet. I gravitate towards them b/c they boot up so dang quickly. I'd love to be able to hook up my tape player, too, and perhaps at some point a turntable. (No 8-track plans at this stage.) So my tuner/receiver seems like an integral part of the plan.

@Very Similar Dude .. I had some free time today and thought I would play a bit with my Chromebook/VLC/flac. First, I put an SDXC card loaded with flac files (16/44.1 to 24/192) into the Chromebook and played a variety of music without issue using the default music player. Then I connected my Bel Canto mLink USB-SPDIF converter to the Chromebook and my Chord Qute EX DAC .. again, every file played flawlessly. (No transcoding to MP3 as far as I can tell.) Then I downloaded and installed the VLC app from the Play Store, right-clicked on a flac file, chose "VLC" and again, played flawlessly. Unfortunately, most Android Apps on Chromebook have issues with accessing storage devices from within the app itself. With VLC in particular you can't map to an external drive, which kind of defeats the purpose of using an app like VLC. So, it works, but it's crippled. FWIW, I also tried a USB thumb drive and experienced the same. I'm tempted to try Music Player Pro but honestly, I don't have much of a need for it.

Chromebooks have come a long way but Android App compatibility is still a work-in-progress. So, a Chromebook can easily be used to serve music but its functionality is rather basic compared to the likes of VLC and others. If you can live with the limits you may just be pleasantly surprised with the sound quality. Of course, a decent DAC is required.

Yes. I am listening, on my chromebook, through a Dragonfly (red). Great sound. I also use a tube headphone amp. Just plug the Dragonfly into the usb port, and your headphone into that. You may have to go to the settings menu and click on the Dragonfly setting, but the chromebook will recognize it. Amazing sound.

It's great to have you here @JenjenF! Currently, the only way to download music to your Ionic is by using Windows 10 PC and the Fitbit app or Mac/Windows 7/8 and Fitbit Connect app. You can learn more about it by checking this article How do I listen to music and podcasts on my Fitbit watch?.

Thanks for coming back @dwizum! I totally agree with you. If you could use Smartphones, it could completely help you with transferring music. Fitbit is always trying to add new features to the devices and to improve the ones that are already implemented.

Chromebooks, with their multifunctional capabilities, offer an array of uses beyond conventional computing tasks. One such fascinating application is transforming your Chromebook into a creative music studio, where you can compose, mix, and share your unique melodies.

Yes, Chromebook has its own default media player which plays most of media formats out there. However, you can always install third party media players from Chrome web store if you need more advanced features and functionalities. ff782bc1db

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