Well, there is a very undesirable "feature" that has always been in rage. It resets the volume on every song change to nearly the max (~93%) here. It is the only player that I have seen doing this, or that I have been unable to configure to stop doing so. This is absolutely unwelcome in multiple aspects: - when I am wearing headphones, I don't want my ear to get blasted on every song change - when I am playing on speakers, again, I don't want the volume to change suddenly
Questions: 1. Is there any way for rage to remember the last used volume? And not set it to nearly the max every time? 2. Alternatively, is there a way for rage to use a soft volume control? That way, I can manually set the system volume and I don't care about rage's own volume control - it can set the soft volume to max as it desires 3. What is the volume control inside rage? There seems to be none. Clicking on the volume icon or scrolling over it does nothing. On Sun, Aug 24, 2014 at 9:48 PM, Carsten Haitzler <ras...@rasterman.com> wrote: > So I have released the first version of Rage. Version **0.1.0** > > It is a simple video and audio player intended to be slick yet simplistic, > much > like Mplayer. You can provide 1 or more files to play on the command-line or > just DND files onto the rage window to insert them into the playlist. You can > get a visual representation of everything on the playlist by hitting the / > key, > or just hovering your mouse over the right side of the window. Mouse back over > the left side of the window ti dismiss it or press the key again. It has a > full > complement of key controls if you see the README for the full list. It will > automatically search for album art for music files, if not already cached, and > display that. It even generates thumbnails for the timeline of a video and > allows you to preview the position on mouseover of the position bar at the > bottom of the window. > > A feature list at this point: > > * Play video and audio files > * Support a playlist via command-line > * Insert to playlist via DND > * Controls hide on mouse idle, and appear on mouse movement > * Fullscreen mode support with automatic "no blank" support > * Playlist visual previews and controls > * Subtitle file support > * Supports Gstreamer 0.10, Gstreamer 1.x, Xine and VLC as media engines via > Emotion modules > * Selection of media back-end via command-line > * Album art fetch and caching > * Video thumbnail timeline generation and caching > * Works with any Evas engine (OpenGL acceleration, pure software etc.) > * Works in X11, Wayland and Framebuffer direct support > * Accelerated seek on keyboard fowrard/reverse > * Drag gestures for seeking > * Special different UI modes for pure audio and video > > If you want to see more go to the about page at > https://www.enlightenment.org/p.php?p=about/rage > > http://download.enlightenment.org/rel/apps/rage/rage-0.1.0.tar.gz > http://git.enlightenment.org/apps/rage.git > > -- > ------------- Codito, ergo sum - "I code, therefore I am" -------------- > The Rasterman (Carsten Haitzler) ras...@rasterman.com > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > Slashdot TV. > Video for Nerds. Stuff that matters. > http://tv.slashdot.org/ > _______________________________________________ > enlightenment-devel mailing list > enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-devel ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Want excitement? Manually upgrade your production database. When you want reliability, choose Perforce Perforce version control. Predictably reliable. http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=157508191&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ enlightenment-devel mailing list enlightenment-devel@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/enlightenment-devel