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The following comparison of audio players compares general and technical information for a number of software media player programs. For the purpose of this comparison, "audio players" are defined as any media player explicitly designed to play audio files, with limited or no support for video playback.
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]
These tables compare free software / open-source operating systems. Where not all of the versions support a feature, the first version which supports it is listed. Where not all of the versions support a feature, the first version which supports it is listed.
Open Sound System: Yes Yes a sound card management and driver system for Unix operating systems: BSD-2-Clause CDDL-1.0 GPL-2.0-only Proprietary (formerly) PipeWire: Wim Taymans Yes Yes (FreeBSD) a media daemon, unifying JACK Audio Connection Kit, PulseAudio, and GStreamer: MIT License: PortAudio & PortMidi: Ross Bencina Yes Yes Yes
Comparison of video player software, for software designed to play all digital media including video; Comparison of audio player software, for software specialized in playing audio and manage audio libraries; Comparison of free software for audio#Players; Comparison of DVR software packages; List of smart TV platforms; List of software based on ...
This category contains operating systems that are described as "free software" or "open-source software". There are multiple licenses possible for both types; licenses that specify what can and cannot be done with the software.
Operating system comparisons (13 P) S. Security software comparisons (9 P) W. Web browser comparisons (3 P) ... Comparison of free and open-source software licenses;
The article "Usage share of operating systems" provides a broader, and more general, comparison of operating systems that includes servers, mainframes and supercomputers. Because of the large number and variety of available Linux distributions , they are all grouped under a single entry; see comparison of Linux distributions for a detailed ...