MediaMonkey is ranked 4th while VLC is ranked 6th. The most important reason people chose MediaMonkey is: You can organize music by over 40 different criteria, including common criteria such as title, artist, and album, as well as items like track volume, lyricist, and parental rating. You can even use custom labels by which to organize and you can set how you want to prioritize the criteria. MediaMonkey packaged as a Wineskin application that can run natively on Mac OSX. Perfect for playing music on your Mac and editing ID3 tags. At last you are free of having to use iTunes and the full power of MediaMonkey is available to Mac users. Uses the MAD Plugin for sound reproduction. The next spot on this rundown of programs like MediaMonkey has been assigned to foobar2000, an advanced music player compliant with a horde of audio formats that include MP3, MP4, AAC, WMA, FLAC.

MediaMonkey Gold

A music manager and media jukebox for serious music collectors and iPod users. It catalogs your CDs, OGG, WMA, MPC, FLAC, APE, WAV, and MP3 audio files. It looks up missing Album Art and track information via Freedb and the web and includes an intelligent tag editor and an automated file and directory renamer to organize your music library.

Features

ForMediamonkey for ios
  • Find music with advanced search functionality that digs through your collection to find tracks according to almost any criteria that you can think of. Search for Composer, Year, Beats per minute; find Lyrics, etc. and stop pulling your hair out trying to find the music you know you have.
  • Customize your library by setting filters to display only Artists or Albums that match the criteria that you set. For example, set a filter that causes Artists to appear in the tree only if they contain Albums that are currently available, and are of any genre other than ‘Children’.
  • Encode unlimited MP3s without having to manually install a new MP3 encoder (the free version of MediaMonkey includes a time-limited LAME MP3 encoder. If you’re so inclined, you can manually replace it with the free LAME encoder, or you can just upgrade to MediaMonkey Gold).
  • Catalog your physical CDs and use the Virtual CD feature to keep track of what CDs you own and at the same time see which subset of tracks from those CDs are copied to your hard drive. Instead of tracking your CDs and tracks separately, the virtual CD function gives you an integrated view.
  • Import and save audio tracks from Audio CDs and MP3 CDs with unprecedented flexibility using the Virtual CD. It allows you to sample tracks from various sources, select which ones you want to import, and then import and save the files in a single operation.
  • Create Previews, short samples of audio tracks, that you can use when trying to decide which audio files you want to add to your collection.
  • Use a Sleep Timer to play your music, gradually fade it over a set period of time, and then turn off your PC – perfect for listening to tunes before you go to sleep.
Mediamonkey

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Media Monkey For Mac

Mediamonkey For Mac

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Mediamonkey Gold

MediaMonkey Gold 4.1.30.1914 Full Version Rar (15.6 MB) | Mirror

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BB10, Z10 and Q10: why they won't save BlackBerry
BlackBerry, BlackBerry, BlackBerry â€' that's probably all your tech news feed has been pushing at you all day. BB10, the Q10, the Z10: BlackBerry has come in swinging with the hopes that when the final bell rings, it'll still be standing, rather than flat on the canvas. Sadly, it is almost definitely a swing and miss. If you read the coverage, the praise for both hardware and software has been constantly tempered by one refrain: this is great for a BlackBerry. It's somewhere between condescending and damning with faint praise â€' BlackBerry gets a pat on the back for doing its gosh-darn hardest and not sucking. One attendee at the launch in New York even offered this high praise of the Z10: 'It's easy to forget that you're using a BlackBerry'. Plenty of phone operating systems haven't sucked. The Nokia N9 was a combination of breath-taking hardware and clean, concise and above all eminently usable OS in the form of MeeGo. Windows Phone is also a good OS and it has still failed to take any real market share away from Android and Apple since its 2010 debut.One of the big issues is that BlackBerry isn't offering anything real that can't be found on other platforms. In the past couple of years, nobody has looked down at their iPhone and thought 'this just doesn't do what my BlackBerry did'. Same for Android. BlackBerry's core concept that it was the phone for business people has fallen by the wayside â€' there's just no longer that requirement to have a split between a work phone and a personal phone.There's no real 'killer app' from any of BlackBerry's offerings. Our US colleague Jessica Dolcourt said of BB10 that 'happy Android and iOS users won't find a reason to switch' â€' and at this late stage in the game, switching is what had to happen for BlackBerry to climb back up the charts and give Apple and Android cause to get nervous. There are two key points that seem to best illustrate what BlackBerry has done wrong. One is the fact that the Q10 â€' the phone with the physical keyboard â€' is launching after the full touchscreen Z10.BlackBerry needed to take a leaf from its own marketing collateral and 'be bold' in this instance. A keyboard phone was the closest thing BlackBerry had to that aforementioned 'killer app' â€' a genuine point of difference from every single other phone around today. More than that, it would have sent a clear signal back to old users that this was a true BlackBerry. That underneath the new OS and shiny hardware was the heart and soul that once made BlackBerry the cult device it was. The other is apps. Much has been made of the 70,000 apps that will be available at launch. It's not enough. Not compared to Google Play and the iTunes App Store. And where are the incentives to get devs building and creating for a third platform? If they're barely willing to do it with Windows despite all of that Microsoft money, why will they do it for BlackBerry?In fact, they're barely even doing it for BlackBerry now â€' it's been hardly mentioned in all the hoopla, but 40 per cent of those 70,000 apps are just Android apps with a different hat on. They're not native for BB10.As we said yesterday, a phone ecosystem lives and dies on its apps these days, and this seems to put BlackBerry in intensive care already. If it were 2010 or even 2011, then we might be having a different conversation. But it's not and we aren't. BlackBerry will get some solid buzz from this, and curious customers will give the new handsets a little love, but barring an absolute left-field miracle, it'll be a blip for the company. At the end of the day, BlackBerry can hold its head up and say that it went down swinging, that it went down with a bang, not a whimper â€' but, sadly, it's still definitely going down.