home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Winamp3 is Copyright 1999-2002 Nullsoft, Inc.
- Winamp3 is a trademark of Nullsoft, Inc.
-
- Table of Contents:
- Presenting Winamp3
- Some features to try out
- About Winamp3
- How to start Winamp3
- Notes
- Some known issues
-
-
- Presenting Winamp3
-
- More than 3 years in the making, Winamp3 is the culmination of Nullsoft's
- attempt to create a whole new type of software: the ultimately skinnable
- program, also known as the highly metamorphic application. We rewrote everything
- from scratch while doing our very best to preserve and enhance those
- subtle qualities of Winamp that make you (and us) love it so much. While doing
- that we even managed to create a software platform known as Wasabi.
-
- Welcome to the next generation: Winamp3.
-
-
- Some features to try out:
-
- - The main system menu is available to you, in any skin, with a right click
- on almost any part of the player. It is also available if you click on the
- little waveform icon to the left of the + menu.
-
- - Grab the little resizer control in the lower right and stretch your Winamp3!
- Use the + button to make it transparent (on win2k and xp)
-
- - Control-P is a convenient shortcut to get to the Preferences window.
-
- - Click the eject button to pick some music files on your hard drive and
- play them.
-
- - Turn on the crossfader. (The button just to the right of the eject
- button).
-
- - Click on the little Winamp logo (the flashing lightning bolt icon in the
- lower right of the main player piece) to bring up the Thinger, if it isn't
- already displaying. The Thinger allows you to open and close component
- windows (like the playlist editor, or the skin switcher, or other components
- you might install) and otherwise interact with the components you have
- installed. If you right click on this logo you get a shortcut menu to
- toggle each window.
-
- - The playlist editor supports multiple playlists and multiple editors now.
- Try hitting Control-N to get a new playlist editor.
-
- - If you miss the J key from winamp 2.x, try hitting F3 in the playlist editor.
-
- - The media library, availble both through the Thinger and through the "ML"
- button, can sort and display your music collection if it has been tagged
- with ID3 information. At first, your database of music is empty. It grows
- as you add new files to your playlist or when you add more files to it via
- the "Add to Library" button in the lower left. It takes a little while
- to read all the info from the files after you add them, but once it's done
- you can try clicking on the available queries to see what it's found.
- Once you find some music, you can drag and drop it into the playlist editor.
- You can also drag-and-drop files from Windows Explorer windows directly
- onto the playlist editor or the main player piece.
-
- - All windows naturally "dock" to each other when they get near. You can undock
- any docked window (including the main player) by holding down either SHIFT
- key while dragging it.
-
- - If you hold down the CONTROL and ALT keys while moving a window, every
- window will move along with it.
-
- - There's lots more, so explore!
-
-
- About Winamp3
-
- What is Winamp3? Why Winamp3? Winamp3 is more than an excuse to have "mp3"
- built right into our product name. Winamp3 is our attempt to create a
- brand new methodology of complete customizability of the media playback
- experience via a system of component programming (which adds new functionality
- to the program) and a brand-new skinning system (to present the features of
- the program to you.) Collectively, this new technology platform is called
- Wasabi.
-
- Our component system gives developers unprecedented access to the program by
- encouraging them to build directly upon our coding platform (named Wasabi) and
- add brand-new functionality to the entire system. We provide an SDK (downloaded
- separately) packed with working C++ code taken directly from our own components
- and Winamp3 itself so developers can immediately start creating great new
- components on top of our code.
-
- New functionality is packaged in the form of "components". They are similar
- in idea to general-purpose plugins, except Wasabi components can actually
- leverage each others' features instead of only using the main Winamp services.
- Components can add a new window into the system, or just provide a new type
- of service to the system (like decoding a different type of media file, or
- displaying a brand-new type of visualization). Winamp3 comes packaged with
- some standard components, such as the playlist editor and skin switcher.
-
- Also, we have completely revamped the skinning system. In fact, we have
- revamped the entire idea of a skinning system. Winamp3 goes way beyond the
- idea of skins that are merely free-form. Our skins are both free-form
- and fully scriptable. Skinners (and now, scripters) can invoke nearly any
- UI behavior they desire in their skin, from changing a bitmap or vis mode
- to dynamically blending and rendering brand new interfaces on the fly.
-
- Another important reason for Winamp3 is portability. Wasabi currently runs on
- the win32 platform (Win95/98/NT/ME/2k/XP/etc). We are progressing nicely on a
- Linux version as well, and we have plans for more operating
- systems/environments to receive support in the future. This means that
- components built on Wasabi will be easily recompilable for other OSes and
- architectures, and skins won't need to be modified at all to be
- totally portable.
-
-
- How to start Winamp3:
- (as originally written for the internal alphas)
- (on a French keyboard)
- (by a drunken Brennan)
- (with my left pinky)
- (blindfolded)
-
- Start Winamp3 via whatever method you prefer. That would mean either clicking
- the quickstart icon, the desktop icon, or by projecting your awesome mutant
- powers onto a nearby human and exploding their brain in such a way as to cause
- variations in the sunspot cycle which causes in turn a freakish burst of
- neutrinos to blast forth from the sun's molten innards (the advanced student can
- use a nearby star and a buttload of patience) flipping a bit in your computers
- Instruction Pointer (usually referred to as IP except on the SPARC platform
- which uses the notation PC, for Program Counter) causing it to jump to the
- part of Windows that is secretly programmed in at the last second that causes
- it to feel remorse for sucking so damned bad and always crashing and deleting
- all your work right when you were JUST ABOUT to hit Save, no really you were,
- and while wallowing in this black pit of despair and self-loathing it hits it,
- hey, I know what would make the world a better place, if I was running
- Winamp 3.0, and it does.
-
-
- Notes
-
- - About the HTTP reader:
- The proxy string can be either: "user:password@host:port", "user@host:port" or "host:port"
- If "port" is not specified, 80 is assumed.
-
- - About the video support:
- When in fullscreen, you can use any Winamp3 key to control the playback and
- also use the mouse wheel to control volume.
- Doubleclick on the fullscreen window or press "ESC" to go back to normal mode.
-
- - About CD playback:
- The CD reader will first try to digitally extract the tracks, so it can
- provide you with gapless and crossfadable output along with visualisation.
- The digital extraction relies on an ASPI manager being installed on your
- computer. It'll also try to use the internal ASPI NT manager, but it might
- not work on all CD drives. If digital extraction doesn't work properly, try
- installing an ASPI manager. Check out the following page for detailed
- instructions:
-
- http://www.windac.de/eng/sup02.shtml
-
- If ASPI is not found, the WA3 CD playback component will then fallback
- into a MCI type CD playback (like Winamp 2 does).
-
-
- Some known issues
-
- - if no file is valid in a playlist, hitting play enters an endless loop
-
-
- Found one we missed? Go to http://bugzilla.nullsoft.com:3430/ and help us
- out by reporting it. Or email to aus@winamp.com. Or let us know your thoughts
- in our forums at http://forums.winamp.com/
-
-
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Brennan Underwood
- Francis Gastellu
- Christophe Thibault
- Justin Frankel
- Steve Gedikian
- Mig Gerard
-
- and the whole Nullsoft team^H^H^H^Hsemi-digested hunks of meat
-