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Centrally-Controlled Home Music System on a Budget?

akgoatley writes "Recently my technically inept parents bought a new stereo and have expressed a wish to have it connected to a computer for storing large amount of music - a Linux CD jukebox. An example of this would be The Idiot Jukebox, but the solution has to be less complicated than that. I've already written a fairly basic music database in Perl with a web frontend for searching through it from our LAN, and I'm looking for a Linux-based collection of software to run the jukebox. It has to rip CDs when inserted, store them in a directory structure based on the name of the album. Modification of the ID3 tags is not necessary as my database handles that centrally. To complicate matters, it has to be command-line based as I will be SSHing into the jukebox to control it. The solution has to be a simple collection of software that can be easily controlled via SSH. Due to hardware (and budget) constraints the jukebox will be too slow to run X, anyway :( This means programs like Grip will not be usable. What do you Slashdotters out there think? Any good suggestions or pieces of software you would use?"

8 of 287 comments (clear)

  1. Idiot Jukebox by FrenchyinCT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are you entirely certain this is a good idea? Aging parents + new technology = unending tech support calls and the increasing likelihood of parricide...

    1. Re:Idiot Jukebox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, a lot of us actually like helping out friends and family, and especially parents who gave us so much earlier in our lives.

      Yes, a lot of us actually enjoy showing others how to use their computers to their full advatange.

      Yes, a lot us actually want to fix others' screw-ups so they're not turned-off by computers, so they know they have a person to rely on, so they're not afraid to experiment and become comfortable with computers.

      Yes, a lot us actually are patient enough to provide tech support to friends and family, to show them how Opera and Mozilla are better than IE, Mac and Linux are more secure than Windows, how they don't necessarily need to buy everything at twice the price from Best Buy.

      Yes, I'm certain I want to help my friends and family. Because they certainly help me when I need them.

    2. Re:Idiot Jukebox by wondergibbon · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Are you entirely certain this is a good idea? Aging parents + new technology = unending tech support calls and the increasing likelihood of parricide...

      As opposed to when you were young, and they were showing you how to do something with technology that was new to you? Like, say, ride a bike? Use a spoon? Walk? How many times did you ask for their help???

      Who bought you your first computer?

      You have to give back. And instead of it being a chore, you should be grateful you can.

      A newbie is a newbie is a newbie - no matter what age.

  2. CPU by GrAfFiT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You mention : "the jukebox will be too slow to run X"
    If you can't get X to run smoothly, how do you expect to encode you CDs ?

    1. Re:CPU by krymsin01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He may be confusing running KDE or Gnome with running X. I use fluxbox on my aging laptop and have no problems. Try to runing KDE and the laptop will just sit there churning the hard drive because of lack of memory.

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      stuff
  3. low tech solution by FiReaNGeL · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Buy them a CD rack. Remove CD from CD rack, insert into stereo, play.

    Honestly, most new stereo cd players come with a 50 discs capacity... is it worth the trouble? If you have 'low hardware and budget' I doubt you'll have space to rip 500 cds at a good bitrate anyway. Could be a cool project, just for the fun. But it's totally non-practical, in my view.

    1. Re:low tech solution by Em+Ellel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      while I generally agree, some math shows:

      Say 1 CD at 192 is about 100MB
      so 500CDs= 500 x 100 MB = 50,000MB so about 50GB, given that you can get a 120GB IDE disk for under $90 easy, I think it is safe to say that ripping 500 CDs is more likely limited by ability to find 500 CDs worth ripping, rather than disk capacity.

      -Em

      --
      RelevantElephants: A Somatic WebComic...
  4. Why bother? by InternationalCow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OK, I am probably the nth person writing to say this, so mod me redundant... But, why this complicated solution? For a couple hundred bucks you by an iMac (candy colored one) and put in a big hard disk. Connect decent speakers. Use iTunes. And there you are, instant juke box. Why this complicated solution? I mean, you get mega geek points, but as far as simplicity for elderly people is concerned, your way is not the way to go IMHO. My kids have the iMac + speakers solution and it works wonderfully. They use Audion with a nice skin for kids snd have required only very limited explanation of how it works.

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    ----- One learns to itch where one can scratch.