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The original author, Mike Oliphant, originally registered Grip as a project at SourceForge.net, the free and open-source software website, on March 17, 2000, and made pre-compiled binaries for RPM Linux distributions available. However, by mid-2005 development had stalled, and while the software was still very much usable, in effect it ...
Grip is a CD-player and CD-ripper for the GNOME desktop. It has the ripping capabilities of cdparanoia built-in, but can also use external rippers (such as cdda2wav). No No Yes JetAudio: Yes No No Juce: Yes Yes No JRiver Media Center: Since version 12.0.3xx Yes No No Media Go: Can rip directly from CD to FLAC file. Yes No No MediaCoder: Yes ...
cdrdao, open source software for authoring and ripping of CDs in Disk-At-Once mode; DVDStyler, a GUI-based DVD authoring tool; libburnia, a collection of command line-based tools and libraries for burning discs
open-source player for the GNOME desktop (GTK) [8] No No No No No No No Daisy Delight open-source player for DAISY 2.02, for Mac OS X and Unix-based systems (2008-2013) [9] No No No No No No No daisy-player an open source, multilingual, ncurses-based program for Linux to play DAISY books from the command line [10] Jos Lemmens No No No No No No No
a cross-platform, open-source C language library for real-time audio & midi I/O MIT License: PulseAudio: Yes Yes Yes (Solaris, FreeBSD, NetBSD) Yes a sound server for general desktop and multihost LAN applications LGPL-2.1-or-later: sndio: Yes No Yes (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD) No sound and MIDI server ISC
This is a category of articles relating to software which can be freely used, copied, studied, modified, and redistributed by everyone that obtains a copy: "free software" or "open source software". Typically, this means software which is distributed with a free software license , and whose source code is available to anyone who receives a copy ...
This is a list of free and open-source software (FOSS) packages, computer software licensed under free software licenses and open-source licenses.Software that fits the Free Software Definition may be more appropriately called free software; the GNU project in particular objects to their works being referred to as open-source. [1]
This has been controversial, as the original CDDB database was created out of anonymous contributions, initially via the open source xmcd CD player program. Many listing contributors believed that the database was open-source as well because, in 1997, cddb.com's download and support pages had said it was released under the GPL.