Event JSON
{
"id": "30e6c19f26193abc6c08238a69382e7f0efb8d9aa41de9da440f7a9503b6fced",
"pubkey": "9d16a5e84f5a41281ac0f59ee2e2cf09bcf09dae03e217813901c6e4e9a65088",
"created_at": 1710979803,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"Apps"
],
[
"t",
"news"
],
[
"t",
"mpd"
],
[
"t",
"musicplayer"
],
[
"emoji",
"sys_more_orange",
"https://s3.mashiro.top/mstdn/custom_emojis/images/000/011/788/original/7ef7a484af2e7939.png"
],
[
"emoji",
"sys_omgubuntu",
"https://s3.mashiro.top/mstdn/custom_emojis/images/000/011/786/original/d0451437f379cb90.png"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://hello.2heng.xin/users/omgubuntu/statuses/112130772408585221",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "Plattenalbum is a Modern-Looking MPD Client for Linux\n\nThis week I heard about Plattenalbum, a modern GTK4/libadwaita Music Player Daemon (MPD) client and it looks good so figured I’d give it a shoutout! Y’know, cheesy 1980s DJ style 🧀. MPD remains a popular way to access music that’s stored on a server, another computer, or even locally, and a user-friendly desktop MPD client is crucial to being able to enjoy it. Plattenalbum looks to be preciously that. This isn’t a “why you should use MPD” article nor a guide about installing MPD in Ubuntu. If MPD sounds like a faff — in some ways it is! — that’s fine, :sys_more_orange:\n#Apps #News #Mpd #MusicPlayer \n\n:sys_omgubuntu: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/03/plattenalbum-mpd-client",
"sig": "c1d7e9d1f3ec2fe90e5b8673bb0ce056e383aa61dfe9b75995d9065c3949e984a70504cc136d52363b1801d76df78cde722881d10e1b51c37a9e84405b17199f"
}