Hi,
I used Freevo 1.x for years as HTPC only letting it go a year or two ago
as I didn't anymore need any multimedia center. As it worked great, I
had no reason to upgrade to anything else including Freevo 2.
Simply loved the things it could do. It could play _any_ music files,
even midi to ha
On Tue, 21 Jan 2014 08:31:59 +1300
Jake wrote:
> This is a sad day :( I used freevo for years but started using my TVs
> inbuilt dlna client when my last htpc died 3 years ago. It was a
> threadbare experience - but at least it didn't try to be too clever.
> I recently got a raspberry pi for xbmc
A sad day indeed!
Quite a few years ago I tried to get Freevo running on a Fujitsu HTPC but, no
matter how I tried, I just couldn't get a signal out of the SCART socket -
something quite basic one would have thought. Loads of people on the web with
the same problem but no solution. So I shelved
This is a sad day :( I used freevo for years but started using my TVs inbuilt
dlna client when my last htpc died 3 years ago. It was a threadbare experience
- but at least it didn't try to be too clever. I recently got a raspberry pi
for xbmc, but I do miss freevo. It had the perfect mix of simp
Hi,
I have no idea how many people still read this list, how many people
still use Freevo 1.x, and how many people use 2.0 from git (I guess that
is only me).
I failed to get a release of Freevo 2 out. I changed too much, a
complete rewrite and some parts are also written three or four times. My