- #BEST MP3 PLAYER FOR MACBOOK PRO TRANSCRIBING AUDIO PDF#
- #BEST MP3 PLAYER FOR MACBOOK PRO TRANSCRIBING AUDIO SKIN#
It is feature-rich but starts fast and can be configured to show additional widgets or only the image. Mirage - PyGTK image viewer featuring support for crop and resize, custom actions and a thumbnail panel.meh - meh is a small, simple, super fast image viewer using raw XLib.KuickShow - Fast and convenient image viewer for KDE.Koko - Image viewer designed for desktop and touch devices.imv - Lightweight image viewer with support for Wayland and animated GIFs which uses FreeImage.image-roll - Simple and fast GTK image viewer with basic image manipulation tools.Install the optional dependencies as needed. ida - X11 application (Motif based) for viewing images.Gwenview - Fast and easy to use image viewer for the KDE desktop.GPicView - Simple and fast image viewer for X, which is part of the LXDE desktop.Geeqie - Image browser and viewer (fork of GQview) that adds additional functionality such as support for RAW files.feh - Fast, lightweight image viewer that uses imlib2.EyeSight - Image viewer for the Hawaii desktop environment.Eye of MATE - Simple graphics viewer for the MATE desktop.Eye of GNOME - Image viewing and cataloging program, which is a part of the GNOME desktop environment.Ephoto - A light image viewer based on EFL.Deepin Image Viewer - Image viewer for Deepin desktop.CoreImage - Simple lightweight easy to use image viewer based on Qt.Features include Vim-like controls, rotation and zoom, zoom-to-fit, and fast multi-threaded rendering.
#BEST MP3 PLAYER FOR MACBOOK PRO TRANSCRIBING AUDIO PDF#
jfbview - Framebuffer PDF and image viewer based on Imlib2.fim - Highly customizable and scriptable framebuffer image viewer based on fbi.fbv - Very simple graphic file viewer for the framebuffer console.fbi - Image viewer for the linux framebuffer console.See also Wikipedia:Comparison of image viewers. 1.5 Game and interactive application development.Funny how with all this modern tech, it seems so hard to replicate something as simple as the rewind button on a good old tape player. I think some DJ-type apps may be able to do this, but they'd probably be overkill, price and feature-wise, for what I'm trying to do. I was just thinking it would be cool if you could rewind / ffwd using the mouse scroll wheel. If anyone has a better suggestion, I'd appreciate it. Also, it has no time counter, which is critical.
#BEST MP3 PLAYER FOR MACBOOK PRO TRANSCRIBING AUDIO SKIN#
QTAmateur is simply a skin for QuickTime and has the same drawback as the QT Player itself: rewinding with the arrow key stops playback. I'm sure it's a great sound editor, but some of the quirks from that background make it not work well for me. It also has to import/convert my files first instead of simply opening them, which with my hour-long files can take a long time. Sometimes, when I want to jump around by clicking in the timeline, I found myself setting markers and then rewinding with the <- key will never go back beyond that marker. Yes, it does rewind by using the arrow key, but when I hit space to start/stop it always restarts from the beginning of the file instead of just continuing where I stopped. I also don't really like the "one time it rewinds, the other time it stops playback" alternation.Īudacity frankly is a bit overwhelming. The apps you guys recommended kind of work, but are not really a *good* solution.ĭoug's iTunes script is probably the closest, but I find the rewind by a fix number of seconds too inflexible. Seems like such a simple request, but it's harder to find a good solution that you'd think. Bonus if it can set loop points, that'd be awesome. Is there a simple player app that allows me to skip back with a single-key stroke? Ideally, it should play the audio backwards while rewinding, just like in an old tape player. In QuickTime, the <- key does work, but it also stops playback. In VLC, I can use a 3-key combo, but that skips back only in 10-second steps. Hitting the <- key in most apps goes to the previous file instead of rewind. When the file is an hour long, it's nearly impossible to just skip back 2-3 seconds this way. Typically (iTunes, VLC, QuickTime), you'd click into the progress bar, but I find this too inaccurate and unwieldy. So I want to be able to easily rewind 2-3 seconds to listen again or perhaps even set loop points and listen to the passage over and over until I get it. In both cases, there are often passages that I don't quite understand at first.