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Home Multimedia Library esteve disponível como oferta em 31 de janeiro de 2011
Home Multimedia Library é uma solução para a catalogação, organização e reprodução de mídia digital. Você pode catalogar os seus CDs, fotos, playlists e arquivos de áudio e vídeo. O CD Catalog permite que você crie um banco de dados dos seus CDs. Você pode escanear os seus discos e armazenar todas as informações das faixas, letras, dados de propriedade do CD, capa, capa traseira e fotos do CD.
Para escanear os seus CDs você também pode consultar o banco de dados da CDDB. Com o Media Library você pode organizar a sua coleção inteira de arquivos de áudio e vídeo em uma biblioteca de Artistas e Álbuns. O Media Library pode armazenar todos os tipos de informação sobre artistas, álbuns e os arquivos. Você pode manter fotos de artistas, sua biografia, discografia, letras e muito mais. Além de organizá-las, você também pode armazená-las no banco de dados.
O Photo Albums permite que você crie álbuns das suas fotos digitais. Você pode organizar fotos em álbuns divididos por categorias, visualizar e editar fotos. Além de organizar as fotos você também pode armazená-las no banco de dados. A Playlists Database é outra biblioteca onde você pode armazenar e reproduzir arquivos da playlist.
O software possui 4 players embutidos e também inclui o Playback Statistic, Internet Radio, CDDB Database e o File Searcher. Todos os formatos mais populares de arquivo de áudio, vídeo e playlists são suportados. Você pode criar uma lista com os seus arquivos de mídia favoritos ou estações de rádio da Internet e usar o software como player. Ele possui um Browser embutido que permite que você gerencie os arquivos no seu computador e adicione arquivos à sua biblioteca.
Windows XP/ Vista/ 7
25.7 MB
$29.00
O Sprintbit File Manager for Windows XP/Vista/7 (sistemas 32-64 bits) é um aplicativo para visualizar e gerenciar arquivos no seu computador. Você pode desempenhar todas as funções básicas como copiar, mover, renomear, deletar, criar pastas, atalhos, etc.
O Sprintbit Playlist Manager é um poderoso criador e gerenciador de playlists com players de multimídia players. Você pode criar playlists do seus arquivos de mídia favoritos ou estações da Internet e usá-los como o seu player padrão. Os formatos de playlist suportados são M3U ASX WAX WVX WMX WPL B4S PPL SMP PLS ZPL XSPF PLA.
O Visual Lottery Analyser é um software analítico de ponta com diversos recursos exclusivos. Ele funciona com quase todos os jogos lotéricos do mundo. O programa agora usa métodos analíticos inovadores como análises visuais, geometria com visualização especial do Ticket e cores para diferenciar os grupos de números.
Comentáriosrios do Home Multimedia Library
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Downloaded OK.
DirectX 9 was installed, or at least some modification to it. Which I think was kind of nice, as I have Directx 11 on my computer... This may be because of some kind of "all previous versions of DirectX is still on your computer". I don't know, and I don't like it.
No choice as to what start menu folder the program would be installed in. Something the program took full advantage of, and put itself on the TOP of my start menu. I do not like that either.
And, now I may be just shouting about my ignorance, but I have just spent 30 minutes trying to import my music-library, and so far have not been able to include ONE file. There is probably an easy way to import my music and keep the tags already on the files, but so far, I cannot find it.
So, I give up, and go back to my faithful Winamp player. There, I know where the files are and what buttons to press. (Again, it might be my ignorance, but I don't think I EVER had problems making winamp find music, sort music, delete music, update music.)
This program MAY be a good idea, but sadly, I will never know.
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@Victor Healry - , where does iTunes keep allow you to keep artist pictures, biography, discography and lyrics, please? And where does it let you create albums of your digital pictures?
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With the popularity and amount of multimedia growing on my and most every Internet media junkie (young and old alike), the concept of a Home Multimedia Library cataloging, organizing, and playing application (as an alternative to Windows Media Center is a fresh new and welcomed genre of application. I was exited to check out this apps homepage to get an idea of it's features (hopefully common sense and practical) and view some of the screen captures of its various interfaces.
But what I found was one single example screen capture the size of a postage stamp and indiscernible as to what it was of.
Being very disappointed that there was only one screen capture of an interface example and instead of the standard of showing example images of an application's interfaces with a list of features, there was instead a big block of unformatted poorly translated text which left me feeling as uninformed of the product as when I started. I had to research on my own to get an understanding of what Playback Statistic was and still have no idea where its sources of Internet Radio are coming from let alone how many genres, or stations there are to choose from etc... I wasn't even going to attempt to fathom why it has 'built-in four multimedia players'.
Once I clicked on the interface screen capture link to view the larger image example and discovered it was the same size as the tiny indiscernible thumbnail making it virtually worthless, I decided there's no way I'm installing this software from a software company that doesn't appear to understand how to take screen caps of their product or how to make the example image display large enough to actually recognize anything in it.
After reading through the description a few times and also reading the descriptions of their other products (and considering the four multimedia players), it seems to me more like they're clustering together a bunch of simple commonly found public domain programing routines and are calling these clusters new applications.
That's just my opinion for whatever its worth (or not worth :).
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@Fubar,
Thanks for all your comments, they are always appreciated, including today's.
Granted, your point is valid that we shouldn't complain about lack of XP support by modern apps. But I'd just like to point out that there are other reasons for staying on XP, like these two:
1) Devices need apps and drivers that were never updated from XP.
For example, I have a 2004 Sony Clie TH55 PDA that can fully sync only to XP. And a couple of other similar gadgets that I'm attached to.
2) PC's that can't handle Vista and further.
For example, I have a completely useful 2004 UMPC (Sony U750P, 5" screen) that has 512MB of non-expandable memory (no one has ever been able to find an upgrade) that would stall on Vista or further.
For category 1 above, yes, I could take a risk that Win 7 Professional and its XP support would work. Or throw away the device (yikes, PDAs became smartphones with mandatory data plan!), or dual boot (why pay up for another OS license for marginal extra utility?), but that's expensive for the honest home user who pays full price for OSs.
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Well, the first requirement for such a system concerning DVD's is that I can access it when I'm in a store, and can't remember if I have this or that DVD, so imo VideoDB is a much better free alternative, that runs on a webserver, uses mysql and is free.
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