Software >
(on Wikipedia)
(on Microsoft Store for money)
https://github.com/mifi/lossless-cut
https://mifi.no/losslesscut/
Lets you cut media easily and with as little quality loss as possible.
-
Supports Ukraine for whatever reason.
Software >
(on Wikipedia)
(on Microsoft Store for money)
https://github.com/mifi/lossless-cut
https://mifi.no/losslesscut/
Lets you cut media easily and with as little quality loss as possible.
Supports Ukraine for whatever reason.
Software >
(on Wikipedia)
https://sourceforge.net/p/exiftool/code/ci/master/tree/
https://exiftool.org/
For reading, writing, and manipulating image, audio, video, and PDF metadata.
Software >
http://nullwise.com/volumeicon.html
A simple volume icon for your taskbar’s tray.
Works great, no dependencies for me, and does more than what I want.
I got this working, because fbpanel‘s volume plugin decided to not show up again.
![]() |
Software >
(on Wikipedia)
https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/SoundJuicer
An audio CD ripper.
A graphical frontend for cdparanoia
~2011-03-07 – (version not recorded) on (distribution not recorded, probably Lubuntu)
Software >
https://github.com/DeaDBeeF-Player/deadbeef
https://deadbeef.sourceforge.io/
An audio player.
Straightforward, with few dependencies and a lot of audio format support.
See also:
A sound player thingy.
I’ve got it, I don’t know if I care, though. Noted here for completeness.
2016-03-31, it comes with Slackware 14.1
![]() |
(on Wikipedia)
http://mplayerhq.hu/
The official frontend for MPlayer.
Quite good.
Can use .Xmodmap for volume control at least.
TODO – add my notes, and scripts
was willwap.co.uk (gone as of 2016-03-31)
Corrects busted VBR records in MP3s.
I most notably use this program with my rip-audio-from-video.sh script
Abandoned?
![]() |
Software >
(on Wikipedia)
https://lame.sourceforge.io/
An MP3 transcoder.
This has been an essential part of my toolkit for as long as I’ve had CDs. These days I use it primarily to convert various other audio formats to MP3.
my rip-audio-from-video.sh script uses lame.
Software >
Cubic Player, now Open Cubic Player, was my audio player of choice back in my DOS days. Officially abandoned under DOS, but renamed to “open cubic player” and further-developed to become multi-platform (Linux).
Rather old, but still awesome.