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Download Winamp for Mac Os X 10.6

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Winamp

Winamp
Winamp logo.png
Winampmain.png
Winamp 5.5x featuring the Bento skin
Programmer(s) Nullsoft
Initial release Apr 21, 1997  (1997-04-21)
Stable release 5.6.three.3235 [edit] (June 28, 2012; 8 months agone  (2012-06-28)) [±]
Preview release [±]
Written in C / C++
Operating system Windows, Mac OS Ten (Beta), Android, [one] Linux (WA3 only)
Available in Multilingual
Type Media role player
License Proprietary
Website http://www.winamp.com/

Winamp is a media actor for Windows-based PCs and Android devices, written past Nullsoft, now a subsidiary of AOL. It is proprietary freeware/shareware, multi-format, extensible with plug-ins and skins, and is noted for its graphical audio visualization, playlist, and media library features.

Winamp was developed by Justin Frankel and Dmitry Boldyrev, [2] [3] [4] and its popularity grew quickly, forth with the developing trend of MP3 file sharing.

Features

Playback formats
Winamp supports music playback using MP3, MIDI, MOD, MPEG-ane audio layers 1 and 2, AAC, M4A, FLAC, WAV and WMA. Winamp was ane of the get-go mutual music players on Windows to support playback of Ogg Vorbis by default. [5] It supports gapless playback for MP3 and AAC, and ReplayGain for book leveling across tracks. CD support includes playing and import music from audio CDs, optionally with CD-Text, and called-for music to CDs. The standard version limits maximum burn speed and datarate; the "Pro" version removes these limitations. [6] Winamp supports playback of Windows Media Video and Nullsoft Streaming Video. For MPEG Video, AVI and other unsupported video types, Winamp uses Microsoft's DirectShow API for playback, allowing playback of most of the video formats supported by Windows Media Player. 5.1 Surround sound is supported where formats and decoders let. [7]
Media Library
At installation, Winamp scans the user'south organization for media files to add together to the Media Library database. [8] It supports total Unicode filenames and Unicode metadata for media files. [ix] In the Media Library user interface pane, under Local Media, several selectors (Sound, Video, engagement and frequency) permit display of subsets of media files with greater detail. [8]
Calculation album art and track tags
Get Anthology Art permits retrieval of cover art, and confirmation before adding the image to the database. Autotagging analyzes a track'southward audio using the Gracenote service and retrieves the song's ID2 and ID3 metadata. [8]
Podcatcher
Winamp can also be used every bit an RSS media feeds aggregator capable of displaying articles, downloading or playing that same content as streaming media. SHOUTcast Wire provides a directory and RSS subscription organization for podcasts. [8] [x]
Media player device support
Winamp has extendable support for portable media players and Mass Storage Compliant devices, Microsoft PlaysForSure and ActiveSync, and syncs unprotected music to the iPod. [eight] [eleven]
Media Monitor
Winamp Media Monitor allows spider web-based browsing and bookmarking music blog websites and automatically offering for streaming or downloading all MP3 files there. The Media Monitor is preloaded with music weblog URLs. [8]
Winamp Remote
Winamp Remote allows remote playback (streaming) of unprotected media files on the user's PC via the Internet. Remote adjusts bitrate based on bachelor bandwidth, and can exist controlled past web interface, Wii, PS3, Xbox 360 and mobile phones. [8]
Plug-ins
In February 1998, Winamp was rewritten equally a "general purpose sound role player" [12] with a plug-in architecture. This characteristic was received well past reviewers. [thirteen] [14] Development was early on, diverse, and rapid: 66 plugins were published past Nov 1998. [15] The Winamp software development kit (SDK) allows software developers to create vii unlike types of plug-ins. [16]
  • Input: decodes specific file formats.
  • Output: sends data to specific devices or files.
  • Visualization : provides audio activated graphics.
  • DSP/Effect: manipulates sound for special effects.
  • General Purpose plug-ins add convenience or UI features(Media Library, alarm clock, or pause when logged out).
  • Media Library plug-ins add functions to the Media Library plug-in.
  • Portables plug-ins support portable media players. [17]

Plug-in development support increased Winamp's flexibility for, for case, a plethora of specialized plug-ins for game console music files such as NSF, [xviii] USF, GBS, [19] GSF, [twenty] SID, [21] VGM, [21] SPC, [21] PSF and PSF2.

Skins
Skins are bitmap files which alter the aesthetic blueprint of the Winamp graphical user interface (GUI) and can add functionality, with scripting. [22] Winamp published documentation on skin creation [23] in 1998 with the release of Winamp 2, and invited Winamp users to publish skins on Winamp.com. As of 2000 in that location were virtually 3000 Winamp skins available. [24] [25] The ability to use skins contributed to Winamp's popularity early in MP3 development. [26] With the increasing number of available skins, genres or categories of skins developed, such every bit "Stereo", "Anime", and "Ugly". Online communities of skin designers such as 1001Skins.com and Skinz.org have contributed thousands of designs; [27] [28] also at GnomeArt. [29] Designers see skins every bit an opportunity to be creative: [30] nontraditional examples have included Klingon, iPod, and Etch-a-sketch designs. [31] The Winamp pare format is the most popular, the most unremarkably adopted by other media player software, and is usable across platforms. [32] One example is the XMMS player for Linux and Unix systems, which tin use unmodified Winamp 2 peel files. [33] [34] Winamp 5 supports ii types of skins — "classic" skins designed to Winamp two specifications (static collections of bitmap images), and more flexible, freeform "modern" skins per the Winamp 3 specification. Modern skins support true alpha channel transparency, scripting command, a docked toolbar, and other innovations to the user interface. [35]

History

Initial releases

WinAMP 0.2a

WinAMP 0.92

Winamp was showtime released in 1997, when Justin Frankel and Dmitry Boldyrev, [two] [3] [4] formerly students at the University of Utah, integrated their Windows user interface with the Advanced Multimedia Products "AMP (MP3 Technology)" MP3 file playback engine. [36] The minimalist WinAMP 0.20a was released as freeware on 21 Apr 1997. [37] [38] Its windowless menubar-only interface showed just play (open), stop, suspension, and unpause functions. A file specified on the command line or dropped onto its icon would be played. MP3 decoding was performed by the AMP decoding engine developed past Avant-garde Multimedia Products co-founder Tomislav Uzelac, which was free for non-commercial use. [39]

WinAMP 0.92 was released every bit a freeware in May 1997. Inside the standard Windows frame and menubar, it had the beginnings of the "classic" Winamp GUI: dark gray rectangle with silvery 3D-effect ship buttons, a red/dark-green volume slider, fourth dimension displayed in a green LED font, with trackname, MP3 bitrate and "mixrate" in greenish. At that place was no position bar, and a blank space where the spectrum analyzer and waveform analyzer would later appear. Multiple files on the command line or dropped onto its icon were enqueued in the playlist.

Winamp 1

Winamp i

Version 1.006 was released June 7, 1997 [40] [41] renamed "Winamp" (lower case). It showed a spectrum analyzer, and color irresolute book slider, but no waveform display. The AMP non-commercial license was included in its help card.

Co-ordinate to Tomislav Uzelac, Frankel licensed the AMP 0.7 engine June 1, 1997. [42] Frankel formally founded Nullsoft Inc. in January 1998 and continued development of Winamp, which changed from freeware to $x shareware. [41] In March, Uzelac'southward company, Advanced Multimedia Products (which by then had been merged into PlayMedia Systems), sent a cease-and-desist letter of the alphabet to Nullsoft, claiming unlawful use of AMP. Nullsoft responded that they had replaced AMP with Nitrane, Nullsoft'south proprietary decoder, but Playmedia disputed this.[ citation needed ]

Version 1.90, released March 31, 1998 was the get-go release as a general-purpose audio player, and documented on the Winamp website as supporting plugins, of which it included two input plugins (MOD and MP3) and a visualization plugin. [12] The installer for Version one.91, released 18 days later, included wave, cdda, and Windows tray handling plugins, as well as the famous Wesley Willis-inspired DEMO.MP3 file "Winamp, it really whips the llama'southward ass". [43] [44]

By July 1998, Winamp's various versions had been downloaded over three million times. [41]

Winamp 2

Winamp two, shown with default Base Skin

Winamp ii.0 was released on September 8, 1998. The two.x versions were widely used and fabricated Winamp 1 of the most downloaded pieces of software for Windows. [45] The new version improved the usability of the playlist, made the equalizer more accurate, introduced more plug-ins and immune skins for the playlist and equalizer windows.

PlayMedia filed a federal lawsuit confronting Nullsoft in March 1999. In May, 1999, PlayMedia was granted an injunction by Federal Judge A. Howard Matz against distribution of Nitrane by Nullsoft, and the same month the lawsuit was settled out-of-court with licensing and confidentiality agreements. [38] Soon after, Nullsoft switched to an ISO decoder from the Fraunhofer Gesellschaft, the developers of the MP3 format.

Winamp 2.10, released March 24, 1999 included a new version of the "Llama" demo.mp3 featuring a musical sting and bleating.

Nullsoft was bought by AOL in June 1999 for US$80 million in stock. [46] [47]

Nullsoft relaunched the Winamp-specific winamp.com in December 1999 to provide easier access to skins, plug-ins, streaming audio, song downloads, forums and programmer resources.

Equally of June 22, 2000 Winamp "surpassed 25 1000000 registrants". [46]

Winamp3

Winamp3

The next major Winamp version, Winamp3 (then spelled to include mp3 in the name and to mark its separation from the Winamp 2 codebase), was released on August 9, 2002. It was a complete rewrite of version 2, newly based on the Wasabi application framework, which offered boosted functionality and flexibility. Winamp3 was developed parallel to Winamp 2, merely "many users institute it consumed as well many organisation resources and was unstable (or even lacked some valued functionality, such equally the ability to count or find the total duration of tracks in a playlist)". [48] [49] Winamp3 had no astern compatibility with Winamp 2 skins and plugins, and the SHOUTcast sourcing plugin was not supported. No Winamp3 version of SHOUTcast was ever released.

In response to users reverting to Winamp ii, Nullsoft continued the development of Winamp 2 to versions two.ix and 2.91 in 2003, [50] even alluding to it humorously. [51] The beta versions ii.92 and 2.95 were released with the inclusion of some of the functionality of the upcoming Winamp 5. During this menstruum the Wasabi cross-platform application framework and skinnable GUI toolkit was derived from parts of the Winamp3 source code. For Linux, Nullsoft released an blastoff version of Winamp3 on October 9, 2001 just has not updated it despite continued user interest. [52]

Winamp five

Winamp 5 featuring Winamp Modern skin

The Winamp ii and Winamp3 branches were after fused into Winamp 5. Nullsoft joked that "nobody wants to see a Winamp 4 skin" ('4 pare' beingness a pun on foreskin). [53] It was also joked that "Winamp 5 is so good they skipped a number" and "Winamp 2+3=v,". [54] Winamp 5 was based on the Winamp 2 codebase, with several Winamp3 features (e.thou. modernistic skins) incorporated. Winamp 5.0 was released in December 2003.

From version 5.2 onwards, support for synchronizing with an iPod is built-in. [55]

Winamp 5.v

Winamp 5.5: The tenth Anniversary Edition was released on October ten, 2007, [56] ten years after the first release of Winamp (a beta preview had been released on September 10, 2007). New features to the thespian included album art support, much improved localization support (with several official, localized Winamp releases, including German, Polish, Russian and French), and a unified player and media library interface skin. This version dropped support for Windows 9x. [viii] [57]

As of version 5.55, Winamp development is credited to Ben Allison (Benski) and Maksim Tyrtyshny. [58]

Ports and clones

Android

Winamp for Android streaming an Internet radio station over WiFi, on a Samsung Captivate Glide

Released as a beta product in October 2010, the Android version for Bone 2.ane includes syncing with Winamp desktop (ver. v.59 beta+) over USB or WiFi. [1] It was received with some enthusiasm in the consumer blog press. [59] [threescore]

Mac OS

Winamp was rumored to be coming to Mac equally far back equally 2001, but the software was never released.[ commendation needed ]

In Oct 2011, Winamp Sync for Mac was introduced as a Beta release. Information technology is the starting time Winamp version for the Apple tree Macintosh platform and runs under Mac Os X 10.vi and higher up. Its focus is on syncing the Winamp Library to Winamp for Android and the iTunes Music Library (hence the proper name, "Winamp Sync for Mac"). Nonetheless, a full Winamp Library and player features are included. The developer's blog states that the Winamp Sync for Mac Beta will pave the style for hereafter Winamp-related development under Mac Bone X. [61]

Clones

Winamp has proved then popular that there have been quite a few Linux music programs which function in a similar way and can also use Winamp WSZ skins and then that in effect i has a player that looks similar Winamp. Those players are Xmms, Adventurous and Qmmp. Qmmp comes natively with projectM, an implementation of MilkDrop.

Easter eggs

Winamp has historically included a number of Easter eggs: subconscious features that are accessible via undocumented operations. 1 instance is an image of Justin Frankel, 1 of Winamp's original authors, hidden in Winamp'south About dialog box. [62] The included easter eggs have changed with versions of Winamp, and over xxx have been documented elsewhere. [63]

Derivative works

Unagi is the codename for the media playback engine derived from Winamp cadre technologies. AOL announced in 2004 that Unagi would be incorporated into AOL Media Player (AMP), in development. [64] After beta testing, AMP was discontinued in 2005, but portions lived on in AOL'southward web-based player. [65]

See besides

References

  1. ^ a b Winamp for Android: now in beta. Winamp blog. Oct 20, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Saltzman, Marc (March 26, 1998). "Sounding off: MP3 heading for mainstream?". CNN. http://www.cnn.com/TECH/computing/9803/26/saltzman_mp3/alphabetize.html . Lists Boldyrev as "i of the developers at Nullsoft" of Winamp.
  3. ^ a b Millard, Andre (December v, 2005). America on Record: A History of Recorded Sound (2 ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 391. ISBN 978-05218351522005. http://books.google.com/books?id=Tmx1064W5JwC&pg=PA391&hl=en#v=onepage&f=false .
  4. ^ a b Mengyi Pu, Ida (November 3, 2005). Primal Data Compression . Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 220. ISBN 978-0750663106. http://books.google.com/books?id=Nyt0HgC81I4C&pg=PA220#5=onepage&f=false .
  5. ^ Mariano, Gwendolyn (May 1, 2002). "Winamp glitch may benefit open source". CNET News. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  6. ^ Winamp Features Comparison Winamp.com. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  7. ^ Dixon, Douglas; Dreier, Troy; French republic, Jasmine (August half-dozen, 2006). "Nullsoft Winamp five.23 Review & Editor's Rating". CNET News. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  8. ^ a b c d due east f chiliad h Van Buskirk, Eliot (November 10, 2007). "Winamp Packs on Features for 10th-Ceremony Edition". Wired.com. Retrieved March 7, 2010.
  9. ^ Hans-Christian Dirscherl (February 14, 2007). "Improved Unicode support with Winamp five.33" (in German). PCWelt.de. PC World Magazine. http://www.pcwelt.de/start/audio_video_foto/software/71882/verbesserter_unicode_support_mit_winamp_533/alphabetize.html . Retrieved 2010-06-28. "Winamp 5.33 especially improves Unicode support."
  10. ^ Graffeo, Deana (September 14, 2005). "AOL Introduces New Podcast Offerings" AOL ; Time Warner. Retrieved March vii, 2010.
  11. ^ Hart-Davis, Guy (2007). "How to do everything: iPod & iTunes". McGraw-Hill. Google books. Pp. 306-309. ISBN 978-0-07-226387-nine. Retrieved March vii, 2010.
  12. ^ a b Winamp.com (December 2, 1998). "New Features list". Archived from the original on December 2, 1998. http://spider web.archive.org/spider web/19981202223045/www.winamp.com/winamp/newfeatures.html . Retrieved April vii, 2007.
  13. ^ Gibbs, Mark (July 17, 2000). "The Elephant remembers to remember sound". Network World 17 (29): twoscore. http://books.google.com/?id=zRkEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA40&dq=winamp+plug-in&cd=5#5=onepage&q=winamp%20plug-in . Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  14. ^ Smith, Will (February 2000). "Complete Guide to MP3s". Maximum PC (Time to come US, Inc.) 5 (2): 44. http://books.google.com/?id=ygEAAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA1991&dq=winamp+plug-in&cd=6#5=onepage&q=winamp%20plug-in . Retrieved June 28, 2010.
  15. ^ "Winamp Plug-ins". Winamp.com. Nullsoft Inc.. November 24, 1998. Archived from the original on December 5, 1998. http://web.annal.org/web/19981205123334/http://winamp.com/plugins/index.html . Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  16. ^ "Winamp Developers". AOL, AOL Developers Network. Jan four, 2008. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  17. ^ Robertson, Michael; Simpson, Ron (1999). The official MP3.com guide to MP3 . MP3.com. ISBN 978-0-9670574-0-8. http://www.amazon.com/Official-MP3-com-Guide-MP3/dp/096705740X . Retrieved March 28, 2010. (preview)
  18. ^ "NotSoFatso NSF Player Plugin". slickproductions.org (Slick Productions). Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  19. ^ Nezplug/Nezplug++ "GBS Winamp Plugin"
  20. ^ "Several GSF-uniform Winamp Plugins". Fantasy Anime;
  21. ^ a b c "Chipamp Winamp Plugin package" Chipamp.com. Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  22. ^ Tidwell, Jenifer (November 2005). Designing Interfaces:Patterns for Effective Interaction Pattern . O'Reilly Books. ISBN 978-0-596-00803-one. http://books.google.com/?id=5clhONg4UQIC&lpg=PA308&dq=winamp%20skins&pg=PA308#v=onepage&q=skins . Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  23. ^ Beggs, Josh and Thede, Dylan (2001). Designing Web Audio . O'Reilly Media. p. 191. ISBN 1-56592-353-7. http://books.google.com/?id=EkCSeYHr134C&lpg=PA190&dq=winamp%20skins&pg=PA190#v=onepage&q=winamp%20skins . Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  24. ^ Hacker, Scot (2000). MP3: The Definitive Guide . O'Reilly Books. p. 141. ISBN ane-56592-661-7. http://oreilly.com/catalog/mp3/affiliate/index.html . Retrieved 2010-06-23. Out of print. Online: O'Reilly Safari Books Online ($).
  25. ^ As of June 2010, http://winamp.com/skins lists over 1900 Classic skins and over 700 Mod skins.
  26. ^ Dabbs, Alistair (2002). Interface Blueprint: Effective Design of Graphical User Inferfaces . Watson-Guptill. ISBN 0-8230-2516-0. http://books.google.com/?id=lQ54VMjLMsYC&pg=RA5-PA10&dq=winamp+skins&q=winamp%20skins . Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  27. ^ Hacker, p.141.
  28. ^ As of June 2010, 1001 Winamp Skins lists over 3000 Winamp skins in over twenty categories. Skinz.org lists over 500 Winamp skins.
  29. ^ Gnome-Art Skins
  30. ^ Tidwell, p. 308.
  31. ^ Tidwell, p. 286.
  32. ^ Beggs, p. 190.
  33. ^ Murray, John (July, 2002). "Building the Lo-Fat Linux Desktop". AUUGN (AUUG Inc.) 23 (2). ISSN1035-7521 . http://books.google.com/?id=849jPBLfc_UC&lpg=PA24&dq=winamp%20skins&pg=PA24#v=onepage&q=winamp%20skins . Retrieved 2010-06-22.
  34. ^ Hacker, p.78.
  35. ^ "Winamp Frequently Asked Questions - Skins". winamp.com. AOL. http://www.winamp.com/assist/FAQ#Skins . Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  36. ^ Ranjan, Parekh (2006). Principles Of Multimedia . Tata McGraw-Hill Pedagogy. p. 249. ISBN 007-05-88-333. http://books.google.com/books?id=TaNmc2IdNVwC&lpg=PA249&dq=winamp&pg=PA249#v=onepage&q=winamp&f=false . Retrieved 2012-06-25.
  37. ^ Apr 21, 1997 release engagement extracted from Winamp.exe 0.20a binary. This version nevertheless plays some abiding-bit-rate MP3 files on Windows XP SP3, but tin crash when paused and unpaused. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  38. ^ a b Haring, Bruce (2000) "Across the charts: MP3 and the digital music revolution". JM Northern Media. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-9674517-0-1. Retrieved March 7, 2010.
  39. ^ License info from Winamp 1.006 Help bill of fare.
  40. ^ Version 1.006 release date from aid screen, version from executable binary.
  41. ^ a b c Bronson, Po (July 1998). "Rebootlegger". Wired.com. http://world wide web.wired.com/wired/archive/6.07/newmedia.html . Retrieved Apr 7, 2007.
  42. ^ "Playmedia News". Playmedia. Archived from the original on June 22, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080622150530/http://www.playmedia.usa/index.php?cat=news . Retrieved April 1, 2007.
  43. ^ DEMO.MP3 15592 bytes, 32 kbit/southward, 22 kHz, recorded in "1997" "Exclusively for Nullsoft" by JJ McKay. Voice only, no music stinger.
  44. ^ Kushner, David (January 13, 2004). "The Globe's Most Dangerous Geek". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2007-03-21. http://spider web.archive.org/web/20070321025028/http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5938320/the_worlds_most_dangerous_geek . Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  45. ^ Morrison, Kelly Light-green and Whitehouse, Karen (2006). "Ability of 10: The past, nowadays, and future of digital living". Pinnacle 10 downloads of the past ten years. CNET Networks, Inc . http://world wide web.cnet.com/4520-11136_1-6257577-ane.html . Retrieved July 26, 2006.
  46. ^ a b "AOL - Who We Are - History". AOL.COM. October 19, 2004. Archived from the original on 2004-10-19. http://web.annal.org/web/20041019220723/http://corp.aol.com/whoweare/history.shtml#2000 . Retrieved April 9, 2004.
  47. ^ Haring, Bruce (July 14, 1999). "Listening to parents, not college, worth $80M AOL loves how Frankel makes MP3 files sing". USA Today. http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/USAToday/access/43162945.html?dids=43162945:43162945&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Jul+xiv,+1999&author=Bruce+Haring&pub=U.s.a.+TODAY&desc=Listening+to+parents,+not+higher,+worth+$80M+AOL+loves+how+Frankel+makes+MP3+files+sing&pqatl=google .
  48. ^ Parekh, Ranjan (2006). Principles of Multimedia . Tata McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-058833-2. http://books.google.com/?id=TaNmc2IdNVwC&pg=PA249&dq=winamp3+unstable&q=winamp3%20unstable . Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  49. ^ Mook, Nate (August 10, 2002). "Winamp3 Makes its Official Debut". Betanews Inc.. http://www.betanews.com/article/Winamp3-Makes-its-Official-Debut/1028955752 . Retrieved 2010-03-31..
  50. ^ Release engagement from "Winamp.com homepage for version 2". Nullsoft. Archived from the original on August 9, 2003. http://spider web.archive.org/web/20030925131132/classic.winamp.com/ . Retrieved March 31, 2010.
  51. ^ "Winamp.com homepage". Nullsoft. Archived from the original on August 20, 2003. http://spider web.archive.org/web/20030920142516/http://winamp.com/ . Retrieved March 31, 2010. "Almost As New As Winamp 2, Nullsoft Winamp3"
  52. ^ "Winamp three for Linux". FileForum. Betanews Inc.. Oct nine, 2001. http://fileforum.betanews.com/detail/Winamp-iii-for-Linux/1002748075/1 . Retrieved March 28, 2010..
  53. ^ "Winamp Media Thespian FAQ". Media Actor Help. Winamp.com. http://www.winamp.com/help/FAQ#Full general . Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  54. ^ "Winamp Media Player FAQ". Media Player Help. Winamp.com. http://www.winamp.com/help/FAQ#General . Retrieved July six, 2010.
  55. ^ "Winamp Media Player Version History". Winamp.com, Media actor aid. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  56. ^ "AOL Announces Winamp tenth Ceremony Edition" . http://www.allbusiness.com/marketing-advertising/marketing-advertising/5268769-ane.html . AOL.com (press release). AllBusiness.com Retrieved 2010-06-23.
  57. ^ "Winamp 5.5 Changelog"
  58. ^ Developer credits extracted from Winamp 5.55 credits screen. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  59. ^ Conneally, Tim (December 28, 2010). "The non-then-obvious tiptop fifteen Android apps for 2010". Beta News. http://www.betanews.com/article/The-notsoobvious-top-15-Android-apps-for-2010/1293558281 .
  60. ^ Flatley, Joseph L. (October 21, 2010). "Winamp comes to Android, one of our babyhood dreams is realized". Engadget. http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/21/winamp-comes-to-android-i-of-our-babyhood-dreams-is-realized/ .
  61. ^ "Introducing Winamp for Mac Sync Beta - Winamp Weblog". Web log.winamp.com. http://blog.winamp.com/2011/x/26/introducing-winamp-for-mac-sync-beta/ . Retrieved 2011-xi-02.
  62. ^ Beggs, Josh; Thede, Dylan (2001). "Designing Web Audio". O'Reilly Media, p. 189. ISBN 1-56592-353-7
  63. ^ Wolf, David; Wolf, Annette. "Awarding Easter Eggs - Winamp". The Easter Egg Archive. Archived from the original on 2011-06-14. http://web.annal.org/web/20110614150856/http://world wide web.eeggs.com/tree/555.html . Retrieved September xv, 2011.
  64. ^ "AOL: new players, new browser (Smoothen)" PC World Online - Polish edition (in English), December xiii, 2004.
  65. ^ Mook, Nate (December 20, 2005) "AOL Discontinues new Media Histrion". Betanews.com. Retrieved 2010-03-31.

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