Skip to main content

Notice

Please note that most of the software linked on this forum is likely to be safe to use. If you are unsure, feel free to ask in the relevant topics, or send a private message to an administrator or moderator. To help curb the problems of false positives, or in the event that you do find actual malware, you can contribute through the article linked here.
Topic: Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player? (Read 5186 times) previous topic - next topic
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

I am a new Linux migrant and am in the market for a new MP3 player. I seem to have fried my old Muvo by unmounting it incorrectly. 

I really need a Flash-based player as I will do a lot of jogging and bike riding with it.

What should I go for?
Yes, I HAVE already searched for the answer on Google and this forum.


Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #2
Quote
I have very good luck at recovering USB drives with this utility from HP.


Thanks! Actually, I'm really pleased as I seem to have revived it with a firmware upgrade. I'd still like to find a truly Linux compatible MP3 player though, as this one is only 64MB.
Yes, I HAVE already searched for the answer on Google and this forum.

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #3
Quote
I am a new Linux migrant and am in the market for a new MP3 player. I seem to have fried my old Muvo by unmounting it incorrectly.  

I really need a Flash-based player as I will do a lot of jogging and bike riding with it.

What should I go for?
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=322042"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

You may find a lot depends on the version of Linux you run. I bought an iRiver which is not claimed to support Linux, but I did (eventually!) get it to work, though I had to change kernels to do so. I have seen some DAPs that claim Linux support, though I can't remember which. Most UMS players ought to work though. Trawl through the specs on a seller's pages....

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #4
Quote
Quote
I am a new Linux migrant and am in the market for a new MP3 player. I seem to have fried my old Muvo by unmounting it incorrectly.  

I really need a Flash-based player as I will do a lot of jogging and bike riding with it.

What should I go for?

You may find a lot depends on the version of Linux you run. I bought an iRiver which is not claimed to support Linux, but I did (eventually!) get it to work, though I had to change kernels to do so. I have seen some DAPs that claim Linux support, though I can't remember which. Most UMS players ought to work though. Trawl through the specs on a seller's pages....

I'll echo this - most players that advertise that they can be a usb drive should work. You simply copy your music to the "drive" and "wallah!" it's there.

I use a NEX iA, which uses CF cards (I chose it b/c I have lots of CF memory for my other obsession, photography). I can either attach the player and it appears as a drive, or I can remove the CF card and put it in a usb card reader I have and copy the music to that. I run Fedora Core 3.

Mark

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #5
>You may find a lot depends on the version of Linux you run. I bought an iRiver which is
>not claimed to support Linux, but I did (eventually!) get it to work, though I had to
>change kernels to do so. I have seen some DAPs that claim Linux support, though I
>can't remember which. Most UMS players ought to work though. Trawl through the
>specs on a seller's pages....

UMS devices rock. No dirvers needed on any modern OS, no nothing. Just plug, mount if necessary, and "play".
Effectively the DAP is a portable USB hard disk or USB key, than can *also* play music, etc.
I use a HDD DAP (iRiver iHP-120), but since I constantly use a plethora of platforms on the desktop, it is a blessing: WinXP, FreeBSD/i386, Linux (i386), Solaris (SPARC), etc.

Not sure about flash-based UMS DAPs though.

HTH,

Micky

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #6
Quote
Quote
I am a new Linux migrant and am in the market for a new MP3 player. I seem to have fried my old Muvo by unmounting it incorrectly.  

I really need a Flash-based player as I will do a lot of jogging and bike riding with it.

What should I go for?
[{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

You may find a lot depends on the version of Linux you run. I bought an iRiver which is not claimed to support Linux, but I did (eventually!) get it to work, though I had to change kernels to do so. I have seen some DAPs that claim Linux support, though I can't remember which. Most UMS players ought to work though. Trawl through the specs on a seller's pages....
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=322521"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]


The Samsung MT6 flash player works great with Xandros.  All the Samsungs are UMS devices, so it's just plug in and go.  The iAudio G3, U2, i5, etc. should work fine too.  I wouldn't waste much time with iRiver UMS firmware, it's practically guaranteed that you'll have problems.  Maybe try the [a href="http://ifp-driver.sourceforge.net/]IFP Driver for Linux[/url]?


Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #8
Quote
> I wouldn't waste much time with iRiver UMS firmware, it's practically guaranteed that
>you'll have problems.  Maybe try the IFP Driver
>for Linux

Yeah I heard about these problems. Except they do not affect my model, so it is worth checking which model you are interested in and whether it supports UMS out-of-the-box as any self-respecting DAP should IMHO.
The IFP driver works fine from what my colleagues tell me, but I have no experience with it myself.

M
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=322737"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

I'd be interested to hear your colleagues' experiences since I never got the IFP driver to work! Probably just me though, I'm quite a newbie to Linux :-(

 

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #9
Quote
I am a new Linux migrant and am in the market for a new MP3 player. I seem to have fried my old Muvo by unmounting it incorrectly.  

I really need a Flash-based player as I will do a lot of jogging and bike riding with it.

What should I go for?
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=322042"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]


You can always go back to cassettes, at least they sound better!

I have had luck with SuSe. Your drive should mount as a USB disk. I used it to connect my Rio. Too bad there's no iTunes for Linux

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #10
Buy something that supports UMS and you'll have support out of the box on all modern Linux systems (OK, maybe not exactly all, but 99%). Or there's software that makes you able to use Creatives and Apple's DAPs in Linux.
Personally just love my H120 with Ubuntu. Just plug it in and it automounts. Then just copy over your music and unmount when you're done by right clicking on the unit and choose 'Unmount' in the dropdown menu. Having RockBox on it makes it rock even more

Most Linux-compatible portable MP3 player?

Reply #11
Quote
Buy something that supports UMS and you'll have support out of the box on all modern Linux systems (OK, maybe not exactly all, but 99%). Or there's software that makes you able to use Creatives and Apple's DAPs in Linux.
Personally just love my H120 with Ubuntu. Just plug it in and it automounts. Then just copy over your music and unmount when you're done by right clicking on the unit and choose 'Unmount' in the dropdown menu. Having RockBox on it makes it rock even more
[a href="index.php?act=findpost&pid=323184"][{POST_SNAPBACK}][/a]

I tried Ubuntu and it auto-mounted and auto-unmounted my iRiver ifp899 (flash-based) player. Sadly I wasn't keen on Ubuntu though. Personal preferences, not because Ubuntu was bad.