


(It's taken many years to find the ones that cause AVS to crash on later version of Windows!). The 'best' AVS Studio modules are included which support Windows 7 and above without crashing. Visualization support is provided through the BASSVIS plugin, and in version 1.0 is limited to the WinAMP AVS Studio. NETs Webforms guru Jeff Fritz the Visual Studio Media Player Extension is, at this time, an integrated Audio Player (yes, right now the 'Media' part of the name is mis-leading but is something that we aim to change over the course of the development of this extension).īased on the awesome BASS library by Ian Luck ( ), it can play all major audio files and online streams too (through PLS and M3U support). Winamp just plays the files wherever they are, and doesn't make catalogs or whatever.Inspired by the many videos of. The other main reason to keep winamp is that I have my own filing system and too many players want "libraries". I don't need to shrink other windows to fit my full-featured player.Ĭan you name another player that small? (I'm assuming single-key shortcuts are common.) Need me? Wrist twitch sends mouse top left corner - click - press C to pause ($5 keyboards, no fancy buttons) - "how can I help?" (probably reliably under 2 seconds from disruption to mute, by now)Īll that convenience and it doesn't even cover a third of the top icon row. From there it's only a couple clicks for >99% of my needs. All the important controls are visible, time left to end of song, and the playlist gives the title if I skip forward (or forget what that song is called). Winamp in shrunk mode, with the shrunk playlist attached to it, always sits in the top left corner of my screen. the interface doesn't shrink down to as small as Winamp / Audacious canĪnd this is most of the reason why I use winamp on all my machines, and have for over 15 years.
