bobkoure wrote:
Remember that SBS was written with the intention of being read only, so
even if someone noxious breaks in they can listen to your music, or make
you listen to some of your own music, make your music stop, stuff like
that.
Yeah, SBS is in Perl, which can be, well,
michael123 wrote:
http://vimeo.com/21880281
http://www.sonataserver.com/
This is the dealbreaker for me:
The SONATA music Server software works with Windows XP, Vista and 7;
Home Starter, Premium and Ultimate 32 and 64 bits.
I'm not a Windows user, and I think that one of the advantages of
psketch wrote:
Hi Ralphy
Slightly odd one - I've installed the raspberry build on the current
raspbian OS (which seems to include ALSA), and after a little messing
around, everything seems to install and run fine. I can see the client
from the web control or from iPeng, turn it on and
michael123 wrote:
http://vimeo.com/21880281
http://www.sonataserver.com/
okay, that's software that appears to be slicker than LMS web ui (not
difficult), but not necessarily better than one of the 3rd party tablet
apps. After spending EUR 100 on that, what about the better hardware?
pallfreeman wrote:
I'm something of an obsessive performance geek when I get the time. I've
tried ZFS in the NAS, adding SSDs to the ZFS, using 15K enterprise
disks with a caching controller; using an SSD in the LMS box, an
additional jumbo-framed SAN, and running LMS on CPUs way too
New to the squeezebox world, read lots of stuff, but I don't feel
comfortable I get it concerning what several applications or plugins
allow me to that I cannot do otherwise, and what I applications or
plugins I need to do certain things.
First case: Compared to using LMS from a computer that
gozer wrote:
New to the squeezebox world, read lots of stuff, but I don't feel
comfortable I get it concerning what several applications or plugins
allow me to that I cannot do otherwise, and what I applications or
plugins I need to do certain things.
First case: Compared to using LMS
I installed SP on a cheap Android 4.0 Tablet, it works perfectly, but
after a few days i get the message:
license authentication failed
If i delete and reinstall SP, it works perfectly, till, a few dys later,
the same...
when i get this message, wifi is on, working, also i could access the
I do understand the sentiment behind the thread, the initial loss of
(genius) Sean Adams from the team and then Logitech's failure to rival
the Apple TV may have dampened the enthusiasm for new players to be
produced. However, I have always felt that one of the greatest strengths
behind the brand
krkr123 wrote:
I installed SP on a cheap Android 4.0 Tablet, it works perfectly, but
after a few days i get the message:
license authentication failed
If i delete and reinstall SP, it works perfectly, till, a few dys later,
the same...
when i get this message, wifi is on, working, also
dpaws wrote:
I'm sure if Logitech did pull the plug then they'd sell the
SlimDevices package on to a new owner for it to be reborn yet again
Not a chance. Not even a remote one. They'd just write it off.
The only question that remains is whether they're working on any
products that would
Frankly, I'd be reasonably happy with a continued mysb.com that kept up
with music services and continued to work with Lms. I can do about all
I want with existing Lms and 3rd party plugins. I've already got 2 touch
players and a radio for backup units when my hardware starts breaking.
I small promising sign today.
The German ct' magazin today writes (it's a wrapup about what is to be
expected from the IFA consumer show regarding music streaming services)
It is rumored that Sonos will announce a new player, also a new
SqueezeBox is said to appear soon. If one of the new
krkr123 wrote:
I installed SP on a cheap Android 4.0 Tablet, it works perfectly, but
after a few days i get the message:
license authentication failed
If i delete and reinstall SP, it works perfectly, till, a few dys later,
the same...
when i get this message, wifi is on, working, also
ralphy wrote:
I'd checked the alsa mixer volume and the player volume in LMS.
Thanks Ralphy - it was the alsamixer - for some reason default was to
mute - no idea why. Un-muted and all seems to be working nicely now
:-). I know the LMS side very well, but I'm a Windows guys, so the
pippin wrote:
username/password are sent as clear text so you don't have to be a
hacking genius to get them is you can get in the middle of a request.
And if you have those, you have access to LMS. Not the whole system if
Perl's security works but still you can fudge around LMS quite a bit.
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